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\
BX 8961 .A3 iyUl-1905
Presbyterian Church in the
U.S. General Assembly.
Minutes of the General
Assembly of the
MINUTES
OF THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
OF THE
v
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
IN THE
UNITED STATES,
WITH AN APPENDIX.
A. D. 1905.
IRtcbmonfc, Da,
Presbyterian Committee of Publication.
1905.
OFFICERS AND AGENCIES
OF THE
Presbyterian Church in the United States
OFFICERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Rev. "William A. Alexander, D. D., Stated Clerk and Treasurer,
501 College St., Clarksville, Tenn.
Rev. Thos. H. Law, D. D., Permanent Clerk, Spartanburg, S. C.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF FOREIGN MISSIONS.
Rev. S. H. Chester, D. D., and Rev. J. 0. Reavis, Co-Ordinate Secretaries,
Box 457, Nashville, Tenn.
Rev. S. H. Chester, D. D., Treasurer, Box 457, Nashville, Tenn.
Office in Chamber of Commerce Building.
For one year: J. W. Bachman, W. H. Raymond, W. M. Anderson, J. H. Lacy,
C. R. Hemphill.
For two years: G. W. Bull, W. S. Jacobs, W. Gales Adams, J. H. McNeilly,
Wm. Irvine.
For three years: J. F. Cannon, J. H. Wilkes, J. D. Blanton, G. H. Baskette,
E. D. McDougall.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF HOME MISSIONS.
Rev. S. L. Morris, D. D., Secretary, Drawer H, Atlanta, Ga.
W. A. Powell, Esq., Treasurer, Drawer H, Atlanta, Ga.
For one year: T. P. Cleveland, J. G. Paton, W. A. Powell, T. H. Rice.
For two years: C. P. Bridewell, W. P. Inman, M. A. Candler, J. T. Plunket.
For three years : J. H. Patton, A. R. Holderby, C. J. Martin, C. D. McKinney.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF PUBLICATION.
R. E. Magill, Esq., Secretary and Treasurer, Box 883, Richmond, Va.
Rev. A. L. Phillips, D. D., General Superintendent of Sabbath Schools,
Box 883, Richmond, Va.
Publishing House: 212 N. Sixth St., Richmond, Va.
For one year: T. C. Johnson, S. K. Winn, George Bryan, S. H. Hawes, F. T.
McFaden.
For two years: G. B. Strickler, J. W. Rosebro, J. W. Sinton, A. L. Phillips,
J. S. Munce.
For three years: J. P. Smith, J. Calvin Stewart, Jere Witherspoon, Russell
Cecil, M. M. Gilliam.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF COLORED EVANGELIZA-
TION.
Rev. James G. Snedecor, Secretary, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
John Little, Esq., Treasurer, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
For one year: N. L. Anderson, T. W. Coleman, John Van Lear, D. N. McLauch-
lin.
For two years: S. J. Foster, J. H. Miller, R. D. Johnston, E. H. Sholl.
For three years: L. S. Handley, J. W. Stagg, J. E. Jones, A. A. Little.
4 OFFICERS AND AGENCIES.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF MINISTERIAL EDUCA-
TION AND RELIEF.
Rev. H. H. Sweets, Secretary, 232 Fourth Ave., Louisville, Ky.
John Stiles, Esq., Treasurer, 210 Fifth St., Louisville, Ky.
For one yeai : N. M. Woods, J. S. Lyons, E. Muller, W. H. Miley, J. W. Tyler.
For two years: W. Y. Davis, John Stites, James Quarles, C. F. Huhlein, B. H.
Young.
For three years: W. J. Rubel, G. H. Mourning, Wade Sheltman, T. M. Hawes,
M. B. Porter.
TRUSTEES OF THE ASSEMBLY'S HOME AND SCHOOL.
Rev. J. W. Rosebeo, D. D., President.
S. W. Somerville, Esq., Secretary and Treasurer, Fredericksburg, Va.
J. W. Rosebro, F. T. McFaden, Jere Witherspoon, Russell Cecil, G. L. Chris-
tian, F. J. Brooke, S. H. Hawes, G. R. Cannon, J. W. Adams,
J. N. Cullingworth, J. O. Reavis, S. H. Chester, S. W. Somer-
ville, S. L. Morris.
TRUSTEES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Dk. E. Nye Hutchison, President, Charlotte, N. C.
Geo. E. Wilson, Esq., Vice-President and Attorney, Charlotte, N. C.
John R. Phabr, Esq., Secretary and Treasurer, Charlotte, N. C.
For one year: E. Nye Hutchison, Peter M. Brown, Geo. F. Bason.
For two years: D. W. Oates, John R. Pharr, J. R. Howerton.
For three years: M. D. Harden, A. G. Brenizer, Geo. E. Wilson.
The Secretaries, ex-offlcio: S. H. Chester, R. E. Magill, J. O. Reavis, S. L. Mor-
ris, H. H. Sweets.
AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY.
Rev. John Fox, D. D., Secretary, Box B, Station D, New York, N. Y.
William Foulke, Esq., Traesurer, Box B, Station D, New York, N. Y.
PERMANENT COMMITTEE ON THE SABBATH.
James Stacy, T. H. Rice, C. P. Bridewell, J. P. Thurmond.
PERMANENT COMMITTEE ON THE BIBLE CAUSE.
T. H. Law, T. J. Moore, J. S. Watkins, G. B. Hanna, J. T. Plunket.
PERMANENT COMMITTEE ON CHURCH AND CHRIS-
TIAN EDUCATION.
Rev. J. B. Shearer, D. D., Chairman, Davidson, N. C.
William Anderson, Esq., Secretary and Treasurer, Charlotte, N. C.
MINUTES
Fort Worth, Texas, May 18, 1905.
The Forty-fifth General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in
the United States convened at 11 A. M. to-day in the Broadway
church of this city, and was opened with a sermon by the Rev. S. M.
ISTeel, D. D., LL. D., the Moderator of the last Assembly, from John
12: 32, 33: "And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all
men unto me. This He said signifying what death He should die.'*'
The Assembly was then constituted with prayer.
The following commissioners were enrolled :
I. SYNOD OF ALABAMA.
PRESBYTERIES. MINISTERS. RULING ELDERS.
1. Central Alabama R. B. Morrow ..D. C. Carmichael.
2. East Alabama A. F. Carr, D. D P. J. Hamilton.
3. Mobile John S. Park J. J. Mitchell.
4. North Alabama F. B. Webb, D. D J. H. Mohns.
5. Tuscaloosa N. B. Keahy T. W. Coleman.
II. SYNOD OF ARKANSAS.
1. Arkansas E. C. Bingham Eugene Cypert.
2. Ouachita .J. L. Green T. C. McRae ( 2 ) .
3. Pine Bluff E. P. Kennedy B. W. Martin.
4. Washbourne J. F. Lawson D. B. Schultz.
III. SYNOD OF FLORIDA.
1. Florida J. S. Sibley
2. St. John's C. O. Groves F. S. Hall.
3. Suwanee Thos. P. Hay J. O. Turnipseed (2).
IV. SYNOD OF GEORGIA.
1. Athens J. W. Walden, D. D G. L. Carson.
2. Atlanta C. R. Nisbet James F. Carmichael.
C. P. Bridewell, D. D. . . W. E. Newill.
3. Augusta J. T. Plunket, D. D S. H. Sibley.
4. Cherokee H. B. Seawright S. F. Mayes.
5. Macon S. L. McCarty O. A. Bowen.
Rutherford E. Douglas. T. S. Lowry.
6. Savannah C. C. Carson E. P. Miller.
Note. — Figure after name denotes the day of enrollment.
O MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
V. SYNOD OF KENTUCKY.
PRESBYTERIES. MINISTERS. RULING ELDERS.
1. Ebenezer W. T. Spears Lawrence Rolfe.
2. Louisville . . . . C. R. Hemphill, D. D. . . Shackelford Miller.
J. S. Lyons, D. D A. R. Carothers.
3. Muhlenburg Wm. Irvine, D. D Chas. B. Barker.
4. Paducah H. B. Zernow .
5. Transylvania L. H. Blanton, D. D W. C. McAfee.
6. West Lexington Wm. dimming John Steele.
VI. SYNOD OF LOUISIANA.
1. Louisiana J. F. Naylor I. D. Norwood.
2. New Orleans George Summey, D. D. . E. F. Koelle.
3. Red River S. Wood Brown John Grassell, Jr.
VII. SYNOD OF MISSISSIPPI.
1. Central Mississippi C. Z. Berryhill H. H. Watts.
\' J. B. Hutton, D. D R. H. Baker.
2. Chickasaw R. L. Nicholson J. P. Sisk.
3. Ethel
4. Meridian H. C. Smith J. F. Smith.
5. Mississippi John W. Henderson. . . . L. A. Cato.
6. North Mississippi J. E. Hobson J. V. Patton.
7. Tombeckbee H. R. Raymond, D. D. . H. L. Morrison (2).
VIII. SYNOD OF MISSOURI.
1. Lafayette E. C. Gordon, D. D H. P. Wherritt.
2. Missouri J. E. Kerr B. G. Grant.
3. Palmyra Thomas M. Barbee Frank W. Lane.
4. Potosi C. E. Hickok B. B. Penney.
5. St. Louis John F. Cannon, D. D. . M. W. McNutt.
C. Upper Missouri S. M. Neel, D. D John L. Leonard.
IX. SYNOD OF NORTH CAROLINA.
1. Albemarle E. P. Bradley N. D. Morton.
2. Asheville R. S. Eskridge W. C. Connell (2).
3. Concord W. R. McLelland P. B. Fetzer.
C. A. Munroe J. K. Goodman.
4. Fayetteville P. R. Law J. W. McLauchlin.
G. McLeod (2).
5. King's Mountain W. A. Murray W. A. Cannon.
6. Mecklenburg J. R. Howerton, D. D. ..H. K. Reid.
J. A. McMurray W. H. Belk.
7. Orange J. W. Goodman John W. Paisley.
R. G. Matheson T. B. Fuller.
8. Wilmington R. M. Mann A. D. Hicks.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
X. SYNOD OF SOUTH CAROLINA.
PRESBYTERIES. MINISTERS. BTJLING ELDERS.
1. Bethel S. C. Byrd J. C. Kirkpatrick.
H. J. Mills R. H. Brown.
2. Charleston Alex. Sprunt, D. D Townsend Mikell.
3. Enoree Thos. H. Law, D. D H. L. Shaw.
W. R. Potter J. J. Vernon.
4. Harmony J. M. Holladay D. J. Winn.
5. Pee Dee J. A. Wilson M. McR. McLauchlin.
6. South Carolina J. G. Law W. A. Hunter.
" J. Lowrie Wilson, D. D.A. B. Morse.
XI. SYNOD OF TENNESSEE.
1. Columbia J. B. Green D. C. Kennedy.
2. Holston J. M. Clark J. M. Newland.
3. Knoxville T. M. Lowry, D. D John M. Brooks (2).
4. Memphis J. H. Lumpkin, D. D. . . C. W. Heiskell.
5. Nashville Wm. M. Anderson, D. D.M. S. Cockrill.
J. G. Garth G. W. Clark.
6. Western District J. S. Nisbet C. R. Sherman.
XII. SYNOD OF TEXAS.
1. Brazos R. E. Lentz N. Cromartie.
2. Brownwood W. L. Lowrance, D. D. . J. W. Ratchford.
3. Central Texas S. A. King, D. D John B. Sherrard.
4. Dallas T. S. Clyce, D. D A. W. Rice.
Robert Hill, D. D R. S. Price ( 2 ) .
5. Durant J. A. Williams
6. Eastern Texas S. F. Tenney A. A. Aldrich.
7. Fort Worth C. C. Anderson P. C. Coleman.
J. V. McCall R. W. Coffin.
8. Indian J. P. Gibbons (2) Wm. Risner (2).
9. Paris J. D. McLean W. Y. Chester (2).
10. Western Texas W. T. Ahrenbeck C. F. Carsner.
A. H. P. McCurdy, D. D.James G. Storey.
XIII. SYNOD OF VIRGINIA.
1. Abingdon S. W. Moore A. J. Tynes.
H. R. Borthwick.
2. Chesapeake C. W. Hollis J. E. Douglas.
3. East Hanover John W. Rosebro, D. D.George P. Haw.
Wm. McC. White, D. D.S. W. Somerville.
4. Greenbrier Eugene Daniel, D. D. . . James Gwinn.
J. C. Johnson (2) John D. Arbuckle.
5. Kanawha Ernest Thompson, D. D.Chas. C. Lewis.
6. Lexington G. B. Strickler, D. D. . . C. H. Rolston.
J. E. Booker T. C. Morton.
7. Maryland D. M. Douglas Frank Lewis.
8. Montgomery P. C. Clark W. H. Thomas.
" R. W. Jopling J. C. Wysor.
8 MINUTES OP THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
PBESBYTEBIES. MINISTERS. BULING ELDERS.
9. Norfolk B. B. McCluer, D. D J. A. Willett.
10. Roanoke T. S. Wilson J. J. Wood.
11. West Hanover J. C. Painter R. P. Valentine.
12. Winchester P. M. Woods, D. D Giles Cook, Jr.
Chas. Ghiselin, D.D.(2)B. S. Speck.
The Rev. J. T. Plunket, D. D., a commissioner from the Presby-
tery of Augusta, was elected Moderator, and the Rev. Robt. Hill,
D. D., a commissioner from the Presbytery of Dallas, and the Rev.
E. B. McCuer, D. D., a commissioner from the Presbytery of Nor-
folk, were elected Assistant Clerks.
The Rev. Dr. Neel stated to the Assembly that as the Moderator of
the last Assembly he had received a communication from the officers
of the Alliance of the Reformed churches holding the Presbyterian
system, requesting, according to a resolution adopted by the last Gen-
eral Council of that body, that steps be taken to celebrate on some ap-
propriate occasion this year the 400th anniversary of the birth of' John
Knox, the great Scotch Reformer ; and that he had accordingly re-
quested the Rev. Dr. R. C. Reed, of Columbia Theological Seminary,
to prepare a discourse suitable to the occasion, to be delivered before
the General Assembly in this house next Sabbath afternoon; and he
requested the Assembly to endorse this action. The Stated Clerk
presented an overture from the Presbytery of Nashville asking the
Assembly to concur in this action of the last Moderator. The re-
quest of the overture was granted, and Sabbath next, at 3 :30 P. M.,
was fixed as the time for hearing this commemorative discourse.
The Assembly adopted the following as the hours of its daily ses-
sions : From 9 A. M. to 12 M. ; from 2 P. M. to 5 P. M. ; from 8
P. M. to adjournment at will.
It was ordered that a meeting of the Assembly in the interest of
the Bible cause be held in this house at 8 P. M. this evening, when
the Assembly shall hear the report of the Permanent Committee on
the Bible Cause, a communication addressed to the body from the
American Bible Society, and an address from the Rev. Dr. John Pox,
Corresponding Secretary of the American Bible Society.
The Assembly then had recess until 4 P. M.
4 P.M.
The Assembly met, the Rev. Dr. J. S. Lyons presiding at the re-
quest of the Moderator.
Secretary S. H. Chester presented the annual report of the Exec-
utive Committee of Foreign Missions, which was referred, with the
records of the committee, to the Standing Committee on Foreign
Missions when it shall have been appointed.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 9
Secretary S. L. Morris presented the annual report of the Execu-
tive Committee of Home Missions, which, with the records of the
committee, was referred to the Standing Committee on Home Mis-
sions.
Secretary R. E. Magill presented the annual report of the Execu-
tive Committee of Publication, which, with its records, was referred
to the Standing Committee on Publication, Sabbath Schools and
Young People's Societies.
The Assembly had recess until 8 P. M.
S P. M.
The Assembly met, the Rev. Dr. J. S. Lyons presiding.
After devotional exercises, the Rev. T. H. Law, D. D., chairman,
presented the report of the Permanent Committee on the Bible
Cause. A communication from the Corresponding Secretaries of the
American Bible Society to the Assembly -was read, and the Rev.
John Fox, D. D., one of the Corresponding Secretaries of the So-
ciety, addressed the Assembly. The documents above mentioned and
the address of Dr. Fox were referred to the Standing Committee on
the Bible Cause.
The Assembly adjourned, with the benediction by Dr. Fox, until
9 A. M. to-morrow.
SECOND DA-Y.
May 19, 9 A. M.
The Assembly was opened with devotional exercises, conducted by
the Rev. Dr. S. L. Morris.
The minutes of yesterday were read and approved.
The Stated Clerk reported that the following additional commis-
sioners had been enrolled :
Ruling Elder R. S. Price, of Dallas Presbytery ; Ruling Elder W.
C. Connell, Asheville Presbytery; Rev. J. P. Gibbons and Ruling
Elder Wm. Risner, of Indian Presbytery : Ruling Elder W. Y.
Chester, of Paris Presbytery; Charles Ghiselin, D. D., of "Winches-
ter Presbytery ; Ruling Elder T. C. McRae, Onachita Presbytery ;
Ruling Elder J. O. Turnipseed, of Suwanee Presbytery ; Ruling
Elder H. L. Morrison, of Tombeckbee Presbytery ; Ruling Elder John
M. Brooks, of EJioxville Presbytery; Rev. J. C. Johnson, of Green-
brier Presbytery; Ruling Elder G. McLeod, of Fayetteville Pres-
bytery, and Ruling Elder Eugene Cypert, of Arkansas Presbytery.
The Rev. J. B. French, pastor, recommended that the Assembly
10
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
celebrate the Lord's Supper this evening, and that Rev. Dr. G. B.
Strickler preach. The recommendation was adopted.
The Moderator announced the following Standing Committees :
1. Bills and Overtures:
S..M. Neel, S. A. King, Giles Cook, Jr., Shackelford Miller, C. A. Munroe,
W. McC. White, Townsend Mikell, H. B. Seawright, T. W. Coleman,
H. H. Watts, E. P. Kennedy, I. D. Norwood.
2. Judicial:
J. S. Lyons, S. H Sibley, Thos. M. Barbee, J. S. Park, A. A. Aldrich,
C. F. Carsner, A. J. Tynes, R. M. Mann, J. J. Wood, and R. E. Lentz.
3. Foreign Correspondence:
Alexander Sprunt, Wm. Irvine, J. B. Hutton, E. C. Gordon, C. W.
Heiskell, J. E. Booker, W. R. McLelland, J. V. McCall T. P. Hay, J. F.
Smith.
4. Foreign Missions:
J. R. Howerton, G. B. Strickler, C. P. Bridewell, L. H. Blanton, D. J.
Winn. R B. Morrow, E. C. Bingham, F. S. Hall, J. F. Carmichael, R. H.
Baker, N. Cromartie, G. W. Clark, R. G. Matheson.
5. Home Missions:
T. S. Clyce, T. M. Lowry, W. R. Potter, J. S. Sibley, W. H. Belk, R. E.
Douglas, A. B. Morse, P. J. Hamilton, W. T. Spears.
6. Publication, Sabbath Schools and Young People's Societies:
C. R. Nisbet, J. F. Lawson, C. R. Hemphill, J. H. Lumpkin, J. J.
Mitchell, J. M. Clark, M. S. Cockrill, H. P. Wherritt, B. W. Martin,
W. C. McAfee.
7. Ministerial Education and Relief:
W. M. Anderson, C. C. Lewis, A. H. P. McCurdy, F. M. Woods, J. E.
Hobson, N. D. Morton, J. J. Vernon, S. F. Mayes, John Steele, J. W.
Ratchford.
8. Colored Evangelization:
J. W. Walden, J. F. Cannon, J. Lowrie Wilson, A. F. Carr, D. B. Schultz,
D. C. Kennedy, J. B. Sherrard, L. A. Cato, S. W. Somerville.
9. Theological Seminaries:
Eugene Daniel, A. R. Carothers, S. L. McCarty, C. O. Groves, C. E.
Hickok, E. P. Bradley, R. L. Nicholson, C. W. Hollis.
10. Assembly's Home and School:
Geo. Summey, J. M. Holladay, J. B. Arbuckle, John Glassell, Jr., J. B.
Green, J. E. Douglas.
11. Women's Societies:
W. L. Lowrance, Ernest Thompson, J. L. Leonard, J. K. Goodman,
R. H. Brown, P. C. Clark, J. A. McMurray.
12. Systematic Beneficence:
T. B. Fuller, O. D. Brown, W. T. Ahrenback, H. J. Mills, H. C. Smith,
A. D. Hicks, H. R. Borthwick, T. C. McRae.
13. Narrative on State of Religion :
J. W. Rosebro, J. S. Nisbet, J. A. Williams, Z. B. Penney, J. P. Sisk,
S. F. Tenney, J. W. McLauchlin, J. M. Newland, J. P. Gibbons.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 11
14. Bible Cause:
C. C. Carson, C. E. Barker, J. L. Green, S. W. Brown, D. C. Carmichael,
E. F. Koelle, M. W. McNutt, D. M. Douglas, W. Y. Chester.
15. Church and Christian Education:
F. B. Webb, L. Rolfe, J. E. Kerr. J. W. Henderson, Frank W. Lane,
J. A. Wilson, J. G. Storey, Wm. Risner
16. Sabbath and Family Religion:
H. R. Raymond, W. E. Newill, S. F. Tenney, J. F. Naylor, J. W. Paisley,
J. O. Turnipseed.
17. Auditing:
P. B. Fetzer, Geo. P. Haw, B. G. Grant.
18. Leave of Absence:
J. D. McLean, R. S. Price, Charles Ghiselin, H. L. Morrison, J. C. John-
son, John W. Brooks.
19. Devotional Exercises:
J. V. McCall, C. C. Anderson, R. W. Coffin, P. C. Coleman, S. W. Moore.
20. Synodical Records:
Alabama. — P. R. Law, H. L. Shaw.
Arkansas. — C. Z. Berryhill, J. H. Mohns.
Florida.— S. C. Byrd, T. S. Lowry.
Georgia. — J. M. Holladay, H. K. Reid.
Kentucky. — J. G. Garth, W. A. Hunter.
Louisiana. — N. B. Keahy, E. P. Miller.
Mississippi. — R. S. Eskridge, Frank Lewis.
Missouri. — J. C. Painter, T. C. Morton.
North Carolina. — John G. Law, G. L. Carson.
South Carolina. — J. W. Goodman, C. R. Sherman.
Tennessee. — W. A. Murray, M. McR. McLauchlin.
Texas. — Wm. Cumming, J. V. Patton.
Virginia. — H. B. Zernow, A. W. Rice.
The answers of the Presbyteries to the proposed amendment of
paragraph 70, Form of Government, were referred to a select com-
mittee of three to tabulate the same and report to the Assembly. The
Moderator appointed the following: Charles Ghiselin, J. A. Willett
and Engene Cypert.
Complaints of J. M. Wells and others against the Synod of North
Carolina, and of 1ST. D. Thurmond against the Synod of Missouri,
were placed in the hands of the Judicial Committee.
It was made the order for next Monday evening to hold a popular
meeting in behalf of Ministerial Education and Relief, and of Col-
ored Evangelization. A proposition to hold a similar meeting Tues-
day evening in behalf of Sabbath School Work and Young Peopled
Societies was referred to the Committee on Devotional Exercises.
Secretary H. H. Sweets presented the annual report on Ministerial
Education and Relief, which was referred, with the records of the
committee, to the appropriate standing committee.
12
MINUTES OE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
The Assembly engaged in special prayer, led by Rev. J. S. Sibley,
for our aged and infirm ministers and their families. At this junc-
ture the Rev. Angus Johnson, a veteran in the service, now 96 years
of age and who had served 70 years in the ministry, was introduced
to the Assembly, cordially welcomed by the body, and with his ven-
erable wife, invited to a seat on the rostrum.
Secretary Snedecor presented the annual report of the Executive
Committee of Colored Evangelization, which, with its records, was
duly referred.
Superintendent S. W.. Somerville, of the Assembly's Home and
School at Fredericksburg, Va., presented the annual report of the
trustees of that institution, which went to the proper committee.
The following overtures were read and referred : From East Han-
over Presbytery touching the method of appointing the Assembly's
Executive Committees and Secretaries ; to the Committee on Bills
and Overtures. From Fayetteville Presbytery asking the separation
of the causes of Education for the Ministry and Ministerial Relief,
and the restoration of the old order ; to Committee on Bills and Over-
tures. From Fort Worth Presbytery for the establishment of a
branch house of our publication work at some point in the West; to
the Committee of Publication, Sabbath School Work, etc. From St.
Louis Presbytery touching the entertainment of commissioners to the
General Assembly ; to the Committee on Bills and Overtures. From
Ouachita Presbytery touching an amendment to the Constitution as
to the method of dissolving pastoral relations ; to Committee on Bills
and Overtures. From Suwanee Presbytery asking that steps be taken
looking to organic union with the Associate Reformed Presbyterian
Synod of the South ; to Committee on Foreign Correspondence. From
Athens, Pee Dee and Augusta Presbyteries touching the method of
conducting work of Colored Evangelization ; to Committee on Col-
ored Evangelization. From Northeast Georgia Presbytery of the
Afro-American Church touching printing statistical reports of that
Church in the minutes of the Assembly ; to the same committee. From
St. John's and Augusta Presbyteries touching a monthly publication ;
to Committee on Publication. From Norfolk Presbytery concerning
evangelistic work among the Jews ; to Committee on Home Missions.
From Louisville and Paris Presbyteries touching the appointment of
a General Evangelistic Committee ; to Committee on Home Missions.
From Durant Presbytery asking aid for Durant College ; to Commit-
tee on Home Missions. From Greenbrier Presbytery for the enlarge-
ment of the work of Church and Christian Education, and appoint
ment of a Secretary ; to Committee on Church and Christian Educa-
tion. From Tuscaloosa Presbytery asking that an additional column
be placed in our statistical tables for contributions to Orphan Homes ;
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 13
to Committee on Publication. From Paris Presbytery for an addi-
tional column to report dismissals ; to the same committee. From
Maryland Presbytery to change days for collections for Publication
and Ministerial Relief ; to Committee on Bills and Overtures. From
Norfolk Presbytery touching a weekly publication for Young Peo-
ple's Societies ; to Committee on Publication. From Tuscaloosa Pres-
bytery asking that bound copies of the minutes of the Assembly be
furnished to the Congressional Library at Washington ; to the Com-
mittee on Publication. From the Synod of North Carolina touching
a day of special prayer for candidates for the ministry; to Commit-
tee on Ministerial Education. Overtures from the Presbyteries of
Western Texas, Mississippi, Chesapeake, Lexington and Chickasaw
touching closer relations with other Presbyterian bodies were, to-
gether with the report, which was presented by the ad interim com-
mittee on this subject, appointed by the last Assembly, referred to
a select committee of thirteen to be composed of one member from
each Synod, said committee to be appointed by the Moderator and to
select its own chairman.
A communication from the First church, Greenville, S. C, invit-
ing the Assembly to hold its next meeting with it was read and
docketed.
The ad interim committee to revise the proof texts of our doctrinal
standards presented a report, which was referred to a select committee
of seven to examine the same and report to this Assembly concerning
approval and method of publication.
A communication from the General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church in India was referred to the Committee on Foreign Cor-
respondence.
The Treasurer of the Assembly presented his report, which was
referred to the Auditing Committee. The Assemblv had recess until
2 P. M.
The Assembly met at 2 P. M.
A communication from the Rev. Dr. J. P. Brogaw, delegate from
the Reformed Church in America, was read and referred to the Com-
mittee on Foreign Correspondence for suitable reply.
The committee appointed by the last Assembly to arrange for the
consolidation of the Executive Committee of Education for the Min-
istry and Ministerial Relief made a report, which was referred to the
committee on this subject.
A communication from the Western Section of the Commission of
the Alliance of Reformed Churches holding the Presbyterian Sys-
tem, and also the report of our delegation to the last General Council,
were read and referred to the Committee on Foreign Correspondence.
14 MINUTES OF THE GENEBAE ASSEMBLY.
A communication from a conference of ministers and elders held
in Atlanta, Ga., and relating to the establishment of a Presbyterian
University in that city, together with a paper from the Board of
Directors of the Columbia Theological Seminary touching the same
matter, was read and referred to the Committee on Church and Chris-
tian Education.
The reports of Union, Columbia, Austin and Kentucky Theological
Seminaries and the Divinity School of the Southwestern Presbyte-
rian University were presented and referred to the Committee on
Theological Seminaries.
The report of the Committee appointed by the last Assembly touch-
ing the selection of a Coordinate Secretary of Foreign Missions was
read and placed in the hands of the Committee on Foreign Missions.
The report of the ad interim committee appointed to prepare a cat-
echism on the Church, presented a report, which was referred to the
Committee on Bills and Overtures.
It was ordered that popular meetings be held next Tuesday even-
ing in behalf of Home Missions, Wednesday evening in behalf of For-
eign Missions, and Thursday evening in behalf of Sabbath Schools
and Young People's Societies.
The pastor of this church in behalf of the people of his congrega-
tion and others extended invitations to the members and officers of
the Assembly to a reception at the Country Club to-morrow after-
noon at 3 :30 o'clock, and to an outing at Lake Erie on Tuesday after-
noon at same hour. These invitations were cordially accepted.
The Assembly had recess till 8 P. M.
8 P. M.
The Assembly met and engaged in a communion service, the sermon
being preached by Rev. Dr. G. B. Strickler and the sacrament of the
Lord's Supper administered by Rev. Drs. J. W. Rosebro and J. F.
Cannon.
At the conclusion of these services the Assembly adjourned until
9 A. M. to-morrow. Benediction by the Moderator.
THIRD DAY.
Satueday, May 20, 9 A. M.
The Assemblv was opened with devotional exercises conducted by
the Rev. T. S. Clyce, D. D.
The minutes of yesterday were read and approved.
An overture from Montgomery Presbytery asking the co-operation
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 15
of the Assembly with an Inter-Church Conference in efforts to reduce
the divorce evil was referred to the Committee on Bills and Overtures.
An overture from Indian Presbytery relating to the endowment
of Durant College was referred to the Committee on Home Missions.
Another from Atlanta Presbytery touching a hymn and tune book for
Sabbath schools was referred to the Committee on Publication and
Sabbath School Work. Another from Asheville Presbytery touching
the appointment of Executive Committees, went to the Committee on
Bills and Overtures.
The report of the ad interim committee on vacant churches and
ministers without charges was read and referred to the Committee
on Home Missions.
The report of the Trustees of the Assembly was presented and re-
ferred to the Auditing Committee.
An overture from Montgomery Presbytery asking an interpreta-
tion of the provision of the Form of Government touching the instal-
lation of pastors ; and another from the same Presbytery touching
emergency calls for funds by the Secretaries of our several causes
were sent to the Committee on Bills and Overtures.
A communication from the Rev. W. H. Roberts, Stated Clerk of
the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United
States of America, touching the celebration of the 200th anniversary
of the organization of the first Presbytery in this country, was re-
ferred to the Committee on Foreign Correspondence.
The report of the Permanent Committee on Church and Christian
Education was read and referred to the committee on that subject
Several papers touching the organization of Presbyteries in China,
and. also a complaint of Rev. Messrs. W. B. Mcllwaine and J. W.
Moore, missionaries in Japan, against the Executive Committee of
Foreign Missions in regard to the continued co-operation in theologi-
cal education in a school in Japan were referred to the Committee on
Foreign Missions.
An overture from Fort Worth Presbytery in regard to federation
with other churches was referred to the select committee on this sub-
ject.
A petition of C. C. Taliafero and others against alliance with the
Northern Assembly went to the same committee.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence reported in part, rec-
ommending that the following messages of fraternal greeting be sent
by telegraph, and it was so ordered :
To the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of
America:
The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States
salute you in the Lord. Grace, mercy and peace be with you. — I Thess. 5: 23.
J. T. PLUNKET, Moderator.
W. A. Alexander, Stated Clerk.
16 MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
To the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church:
In the name of the Lord Jesus we greet you. May His Spirit be with you. —
Phil. 4: 19.
J. T. PLUNKET, Moderator.
"W. A. Alexander, Stated Clerk.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence asked that certain over-
tures touching closer relations, which had been placed in its hands,
be transferred to the select committee of thirteen, which was granted.
The Committee on Bills and Overtures asked that an overture from
Norfolk Presbytery relating to the evangelization of the Jews be trans-
ferred to the Committee on Home Missions, which was granted.
The Committee on Bills and Overtures made a partial report as
follows:
The Committee on Bills and Overtures has had placed in its hands the fol-
lowing overture from the Presbytery of St. Louis:
In view of the well-founded conviction that the present plan of entertaining
the Commissioners to the General Assembly imposes a burdensome tax upon
the churches whose guests they are, therefore the Presbytery of St. Louis
overtures the Assembly to appoint an ad-interim committee, to take the whole
issue under advisement, and report to the Assembly of 1906.
The committee recommends that this overture be answered in the
negative. Adopted.
With regard to the report of the committee appointed to prepare
a catechism on the Church, the committee recommends that the ad
interim committee be discharged and their diligence be commended ;
and that the manuscript placed in our hands be put at the disposal of
the Executive Committee of Publication. Adopted.
The following overture is from the Presbytery of Fayetteville :
That the next Assembly be, and is hereby, overtured to separate the causes
of Ministerial Relief and Ministerial Education, and that each be placed in
charge of an executive committee and secretary, and that the cause of Minis-
terial Relief be replaced in the hands of the Executive Committee, which
latterly had charge of it in Richmond, Va.
The committee recommends that it be answered in the negative.
Adopted.
The report of the committee touching an overture proposing an
amendment to the Form of Government in relation to the dissolution
of the pastoral relation was docketed.
The records of the Synod of Virginia were approved.
The records of the Synod of Arkansas were approved, with the
exception of the fact that on page 17 the Synod directs the Clerk
not to send the minutes to the meetings of the Assembly until after
Synod has approved the record of its own minutes, which is contrary
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 17
to the Book of Church Order, section 85, which requires the minuted
to be presented annually.
The report of the Committee on the Records of the Synod of 'Xorth
Carolina was docketed.
It was made the order for 2 :30 this afternoon to select the place
of the next Assembly.
The Assembly had recess till 2 P. M.
2 P. M.
The Assembly met.
The Committee on Bills and Overtures recommended that the over-
ture from the Presbytery of Maryland asking the Assembly to ex-
change the date of collection for the Publication and Colportage cause
and that of Ministerial Relief, letting each take the date now occu-
pied by the other, be answered in the negative. Adopted.
The First church of Greenville, S. C, was selected as the place of
the next Assembly.
The Moderator announced the following select committees:
On Closer Relations with Oilier Presbyterian Churches — Win. Ir-
vine, George Summey, Robt. Hill, Thos. P. Hay. ( '. P. Bridewell,
Ernest Thompson, P. R. Law, J. A. Wilson, W. M. Anderson, F. B.
Webb, J. E. Hobson, T. C. McRae and Thos. M. Barbee.
On the Revision of the Proof Texts of the Doctrinal Standards —
E. C. Gordon, J. D. McLean, J. C. Painter. Wm. H. Thomas, Win.
Cumming, ( !. W. Heiskell and S. C. Byrd.
The Assembly then adjourned till 9 A. M. Monday.
FOURTH DAY.
Monday, May 22, A. M.
The Assembly was opened with devotional exercises conducted by
Rev. J. M. Holladay. The minutes of Saturday were read and ap-
proved. An overture from the Presbytery of Central Mississippi
touching federation was read and referred to the select committee on
that subject.
The report of the Permanent ( Jommittee on the Sabbath and Fam-
ily Religion was presented and referred to the Standing Committee
on the same.
The ( 'ommittee on Bills and Overtures reported on the overtures
from East Hanover and Asheville Presbyteries touching the manner
of electing Executive Committees and Secretaries. The report was
docketed.
The Judicial Committee made the following report, which was
adopted :
18 MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
The Judicial Committee would report upon the complaint of J. M. Wells
and others against the Synod of North Carolina that the proceedings
have been orderly, and the record properly kept. It recommends that
the case be tried by a commission of the Assembly, both parties having con-
sented to this course. In accordance with the provision of paragraph 269 of
the Book of Church Order, we further recommend that the commission first
hear the record of the case; second, that the complainant be heard; third,
that the respondent be heard; fourth, that the complainant be heard again,
and then that the case be considered and decided.
In the case of N. D. Thurmond against the Synod of Missouri, the com-
mittee reports that the records of the case have been examined and found in
order. Both parties thereto having agreed to a trial by a commission of the
Assembly, the committee recommends that a commission be appointed to hear
and decide the case according to the provision of paragraph 269 of the Book
of Church Order. J. S. LYONS, Chairman.
The following resolution was adopted :
Resolved, 1. That the Assembly has heard with great pleasure and profit
the address by the Rev. Richard C. Reed, D. D., on John Knox, His Field and
Work.
2. That the Assembly hereby requests Dr. Reed to furnish the Executive
Committee of Publication with the manuscript of this address for the pur-
pose of publication, if the way be clear.
The following report of the Committee on Bills and Overtures was
taken from the docket and adopted :
The Presbytery of Ouachita respectfully overtures the General Assembly to
appoint a committee, which shall report at this meeting of the Assembly, to
revise Chapter VI, section V, paragraph XIII, Book of Church Order, so that
the law of the Church shall be made to conform to the prevailing custom of
dissolving the pastoral relation.
Your committee recommend an affirmative answer to this overture, and that
the Moderator appoint a committee of three, who shall frame the amendment
proposed and report it back to the Assembly for its approval, and to be sent
down to the Presbyteries for adoption.
The Moderator appointed as this committee : J. F. Cannon, C. W.
Heiskell and J. L. Green.
The papers on commissions, reported to the last Assembly and re-
ferred f<a- consideration to this Assembly, were taken from the docket
and referred to the Committee on Bills and Overtures.
The report of the Presbyterian College of Durant was presented
and referred to the Standing Committee on Home Missions.
The report of the Committee on Bills and Overtures relating to the
method of electing Executive Committees and Secretaries was taken
from the docket and considered until the hour of recess, when the As-
sembly receded from business until 2 P. M.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 19
2 P. M.
The Assembly met and resumed the unfinished business. The re-
pert of the committee was amended and adopted as follows :
The Committee on Bills and Overtures report that the following overtures
have been placed in their hands:
The Presbytery of East Hanover overtures the General Assembly as fol-
lows: "Inasmuch as a different method of constituting our Executive Com-
mittees may give a greater degree of stability in the management of the va-
rious departments of our Church work, which may be conducive to efficiency
and safety; therefore be it
"Resolved, That the Presbytery of East Hanover respectfully overture the
General Assembly, which is to meet in Ft. Worth, Texas, to adopt the follow-
ing uniform method in the selection of our Executive Committees:
"1. The Executive Committees of the General Assembly for the administra-
tion of the various benevolent causes of the Church, shall consist of twelve
members each, exclusive of the secretary, and shall be divided into three
classes of four members each, one of these classes to be elected every year to
serve for a period of three years, and shall be eligible for re-election at the
pleasure of the General Assembly.
".2. The secretary, who shall also be a member of the Executive Committee,
shall be elected by the Executive Committee itself.
"3. Seven members of an Executive Committee shall constitute a quorum
for the transaction of business."
The Presbytery of Asheville sends to the General Assembly an overture to
the same effect.
To these overtures your committee recommends the following answer:
1. It is ordered that hereafter the Executive Committees of the General
Assembly shall be constituted of not fewer than nine nor more than fifteen
members, exclusive of the secretary or secretaries, to be elected by the As-
sembly and divided into three classes, of which one class shall be elected each
year. Upon the election of the members of these committees at the present
meeting of the Assembly, the Assembly shall designate the classes to which
the members shall belong.
2. The secretaries are to be elected by the Assembly on the nomination of
the Executive Committees, respectively, but the right of members of the
General Assembly to make other nominations is not hereby restricted. The
tenure of the office of secretary shall be for a period of three years, beginning
September 1st following the sessions of the Assembly at which the secretary
was elected. It is competent, however, for the Assembly at any meeting to
remove any one of the secretaries for cause.
3. A majority of the members of an Executive Committee shall constitute
a quorum for the transaction of business. Three-fourths of the whole number
of members shall be necessary for the nomination of a secretary.
4. The secretary shall be a member of the Executive Committee, but shall
have no vote in the nomination of the secretary. S. M. NEEL, Chairman.
The Moderator appointed the following: Commissions to hear and
decide the eases of complaint :
20 MINUTES OF Tilt; (iK.XKKAL ASSEMBLY.
COMMISSION TO HEAR COMPLAINT OF J. M. WELLS AND OTHERS
AGAINST THE SYNOD OF NORTH CAROLINA.
C. W. Heiskell, J. W. Rosebro, J. Lowrie Wilson, J. B. Hutton, J. S. Park,
R. E. Lentz, C. C. Lewis, J. E. Hobson, T. M. Barbee, J. F. Smith, A. J. Tynes,
Giles Cook, Jr., T. W. Coleman, D. C. Carmichael, R. E. Douglas, W. L.
Lowrance, John Steele, Wm. Cumming, Geo. P. Haw, A. B. Morse, J. M.
Holladay, M. McR. McLauchlin, R. G. Matheson, I. D. Norwood, T. M. Lowry,
J. W. Henderson, J. D. McLean.
COMMISSION TO HEAR COMPLAINT OF N. D. THURMOND AGAINST
THE SYNOD OF MISSOURI.
Shackelford Miller, S. H. Sibley, J. H. Lumpkin, A. H. McCurdy, J. G. Law,
T. P. Hay, H. J. Mills, G. W. Clark, C. E. Barker, W. H. Belk, J. W. McLauch-
lin, W. R. McLelland, Eugene Cypert, J. S. Lyons, A. A. Aldrich, Townsend
Mikell, J. J. Wood, J. W. Walden, J. F. Carmichael, J. F. Naylor, C. Z. Berry-
hill, J. F. Smith, J. L. Green, W. R. Potter, P. J. Hamilton, F. M. Woods,
W. McC. White.
The following was received by telegram from the General Assem-
bly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church :
Fresno. Cal., May 22, 1905.
The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, U. S., Ft. Worth, Texas:
With sincerity and cordiality the General Assembly of the Cumberland
Presbyterian Church acknowledges and returns your greeting. II Pet. 1: 2.
J. J. HAIL, Moderator.
J. M. HUBBERT, si<n<<i Clerk.
The Assembly had recess until 8 P. )l.
8 P. -M.
The Assembly engaged in a popular meeting in the interests of Min-
isterial Education and Relief and Colored Evangelization, Rev. W.
M. Anderson, D. D., presiding.
After appropriate devotional exercises, the report of the Standing
Committee on Ministerial Education and Relief was read and dock-
eted.
The Assembly was addressed by the Rev. H. H. Sweets, Secretary,
on Ministerial Education and Relief, and by the Rev. Dr. J. W.
Walden and Rev. J. G. Snedecor, Secretary, on Colored Evangeliza-
tion.
The Assembly then adjourned until A. M. to-rnorrow, with the
benediction by the Rev. Dr. Walden.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 21
FIFTH DAY.
Tuesday, May 23, 9 A. M.
The Assembly was opened with devotional exercises conducted by
the Rev. Thos. P. Hay. The minutes of yesterday were read and ap-
proved.
The following message of greeting was received from the General
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of Amer-
ica:
Winona Lake. Ind., May 22.
The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the U. S., Ft. Worth,
Texas :
This Assembly heartily and unanimousily reciprocated your fraternal greet-
ings. See Romans 8: 38, 39.
J. D. MOFFAT, Moderator.
Wm. H. Roberts. Stated Clerk.
The Committee on the Bible Cause presented its report, which was
adopted, and is as follows :
On the eastern point of the Island of Pharos, near the site of the ancient
city of Alexandria, in Egypt, there stood a famous light-house. Far out
over the turbulent waters of the Mediterranean shone its resplendent light-,
and many the vessels of commerce freighted with their treasures which were
guided asfely into port along its shining pathway. Mariners and passengers
after a tedious and stormy voyage greeted with unspeakable joy its brilliant
and comfortable effulgence. There it stood "holding forth" the light of life to
the voyagers who were making their way into that attractive harbor.
At the entrance to New York harbor there arises into view the renowned
statue of Liberty, which embodies in its silent grandeur the cherished mis-
sion of our republic in the family of nations, '"Liberty Enlightning the
World," its golden silence proclaiming to the oppressed of earth that here in
the land of enlightment there is equality before the law, and protection for
each and all in the pursuit of happiness and peace.
These majestic symbols eloquently illustrate the mission of the Church of
Christ. "The sons of God without rebuke in the midst of a crooked and per-
verse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world, holding forth the
Word of Life."
The American Bible Society is the recognized agency of our Assembly for
the distribution of the Word of God. The conspicuous thing about a light-
house is the light that flashes from its tower. The American Bible Society is
an establishment for service. Through this organization, in the power of
God's Spirit, the benighted of earth are enabled to translate into their ex-
perience the gracious words of the Scripture. "The entrance of Thy Word
giveth life."
We are committed to the support of this work. Through this means we
are privileged to make such contributions as may be conducive to the end
"that the Word of God may have free course and be glorified." Theoretically,
our General Assembly is just as much committed to the work of the American
22
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Bible Society as the other benevolences of the Church. A few observations,
however, clearly indicate that the Church at large is not awake to the
obligations assumed for the support of this great missionary and evangelistic
enterprise.
Your standing committee has had for consideration the eighty-ninth annual
report of the Board of Managers of the American Bible Society, the report of
Rev. John Fox, D. D., Corresponding Secretary, his instructive and enjoyable
address to the Assembly, and the annual report of our Assembly's Permanent
Committee on the Bible Cause. While there is much to encourage us in the
great work of the American Bible Society, there is for some reason deplorable
neglect of this cause in the bounds of our Assembly. The impression seems
to obtain that the American Bible Society is a rich institution. This is a
mistaken idea. The annual income of this society from investments is but
$36,129. G3. According to the minutes of the Assembly, there are 3,082
churches within our bounds; 2,615 of this number report no contribution to
the Bible cause. Less than one-fifth of our churches give anything. Over
four-fifths give nothing to this cause. The churches reported as giving, in
comparison to their offerings for other causes, give in meagre measure. The
minutes of the Assembly of 1904 show that the gifts of nine of our leading
churches amount to $15.00, an average of $1.66§ per church; five of these nine
churches report nothing given. The average contribution of our Church to
this cause is less than three cents per member. We recommend:
1. That the Assembly earnestly commend the purposes and work of the
American Bible Society to the prayers and cordial support of our sessions
and churches.
2. That the recommendations of the Permanent Committee be endorsed,
which recommendations are (1) that the General Assembly again call upon
our Church to raise during the present year at least $10,000.00 for the Bible
cause; (2) that our Presbyteries be urged to use such means as in their
judgment may be best to secure the presentation of this cause, and a liberal
offering in all of the churches, if not on the third Sabbath in October, then on
some other day, which may be more convenient.
3. That our Field Secretary, who is also chairman of the Assembly's Per-
manent Committee on Bible Cause, be requested to send an urgent letter,
previous to the offering for this cause, to each minister and session within our
bounds.
4. That inasmuch as May 8, 1906, will be the 90th anniversary of the Ameri-
can Bible Society, and inasmuch as the Board of Managers desire to have this
event celebrated with appropriate exercises, our Assembly, in compliance with
this suggestion, authorize its Permanent Committee to co-operate with the
various churches in such measures as may be devised for a suitable recog-
nition of this 90th anniversary, and to arrange for services of an appropriate
character during the sessions of our next General Assembly, May, 1906, in
Greenville, S. C.
5. That the Assembly reappoint the present Permanent Committee.
Respectfully submitted, CHAS. C. CARSON, Chairman.
The Committee on Bills and Overtures made the following; report,
which was amended and adopted :
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 23
Your committee recommend that the following overture be answered in the
affirmative:
In view of the alarming number of divorces annually granted in the United
States, the ease and facility with which they are obtained in many of the
States, the numerous and often trivial grounds on which they are constantly
sought and granted, and the unseemly and shocking haste in which the
divorced remarry, all of which amounts to a national shame, constitutes a
grave menace to public and private morals, the sanctity of marriage and the
purity of the home, and threatens to subvert the family, which is the foun-
dation of the Church, the Presbytery of Montgomery, convened in Bedford
City, Va., hereby respectfully overtures the General Assembly of the Presby-
terian Church in the United States, which convenes in Fort Worth, Texas, on
May 18, 1905:
1. To authorize the Moderator of said General Assembly to appoint three
persons to represent the Presbyterian Church in the United States in the
Inter-Church Conference on Marriage and Divorce.
2. To urge upon all our ministers:
(a) To endeavor, by special preaching of the Word, to create and maintain
an elevated and healthy public sentiment on the subject of the sanctity of
marriage and the sin of divorce, except where obtained on grounds allowed
by the Scriptures.
(b) To exercise the utmost caution in the matter of the remarriage of
divorced persons, and to refuse to officiate at the remarriage of any and all
such persons, except such as have been divorced upon grounds allowed by our
Church to be scriptural; and then only in the case of the innocent party.
The Moderator appointed the following as the committee provided
for : Rev. A. W. Pitzer, Rev. R. W. Jopling and Elder Giles Cook, Jr.
The select committee on closer relations with other Presbyterian
bodies presented a report, which was received and docketed, and its
consideration made the first order for to-morrow morning.
The Assembly had recess until 2 P. M.
8 P. M.
The Assembly met.
The Committee on Bills and Overture- made a report upon the
subject of Ecclesiastical Commissions, which was docketed.
The Committee on Home Missions presented its report, which was
adopted, and is as follows:
Your Standing Committee on Home Missions finds cause for special thanks-
giving in the fact that God has so richly blessed the Home Mission work of
our beloved Church during the past year. Under the blessing of God our
Executive Committee of Home Missions has been able to close the best year
in our history. We are grateful for the blessings passed, and are encouraged
to attempt larger things for the future.
The Executive Committee makes the following financial report: "From con-
tributions, $40,427.47; from loan fund, $769.25; legacies. $25,581.75; interest
on bond and note, $1,550.00; total receipts, $08,328.47. The progress of the
work during the past few years may be judged from the following: Average
24 MINUTES OE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
annual receipts for the first seven years of the present plan of operations,
$30,109.84; average annual receipts for the last four years, $51,203.19; average
annual expenditures for the first seven years for sustentation, evangelization
and church erection, $25,718.03; average annual expenditure for the same
during the last four years, $34,200.17.
The expenditures for Home Missions were as follows: For the support of
five missionaries and fourteen churches among the Mexicans; fifty-six min-
isters and one hundred and eighty-one churches in Texas; twenty-one minis-
ters and forty-two churches in Arkansas; seventeen ministers and forty
churches in Florida; seventeen ministers and forty-six churches in Indian
Territory; two ministers and four churches in Georgia; four ministers and
nineteen churches in Mississippi; support of eight schools and twenty teach-
ers in the Indian Territory, and ten schools and twenty-seven teachers in the
mountains. The entire number of ministers and teachers supported in
whole or in part was 171, and the whole number of churches aided 348.
We would place on record our appreciation of the generous deeds of Mrs.
Sarah C. Ball, of Ft. Worth, who, since the last meeting of the Assembly, has
been called to her reward, and we would express grateful thanks to God for
His kindness in inspiring her noble acts, which will doubtless constrain
future generations "to rise up and call her blessed."
We would also express our appreciation of the continued liberalities of one
generous individual, who, through his gift of $2,000.00 annually, has enabled
our committee to maintain in the mountain section of the country ten schools
with twenty-seven teachers and 1,218 scholars. We express the hope that
others blessed with money may be led to follow the example of this noble
servant of our Master. It is impossible to estimate the value of such work
in its influence upon the character of the young people themselves and the
future development of our Church, by means of this missionary agency. With
gratitude we note the large ingathering from the mission schools of the Indian
Territory. There were more than 100 additions to our Church from Durant
College and two other schools during the month of April last. While appre-
ciating the work done in all the mission schools of the Indian Territory, we
would call special attention to the importance of maintaining Durant College,
suffering for lack of dormitory room and equipment, as well as endowment,
to remunerate the seven teachers laboring so faithfully in this useful institu-
tion. There were 350 students enrolled during the last session.
We call attention to the Mexican work, and rejoice in the continued favor
of God upon it.
We are also pleased to notice that arrangements have already been made to
work among the Japanese who have come to the rice fields of South Texas.
This is an illustration of the possibilities which are constantly opening for
a greater work in the West and Southwest of our country.
We would call the Assembly's attention to the importance of church erec-
tion, and the fact that the funds of the committees are not adequate to meet
the demands which are constantly made upon it.
Often substantial assistance from the committee would enable our Church
to hold important points in the readily developing West.
The loan fund continues intact, and while having given substantial aid to
many weak and struggling churches, is not sufficient to meet the calls which
are made from time to time.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 25
The new territory and unorganized sections of the West call for special con-
sideration. Here we find a field with tremendous possibilities for the Church
if we carry on an aggressive work. We would suggest that the committee
use all diligence to enter these open doors as fast as possible.
It is with special pleasure that we hear of the increase in the number of
churches and individuals who have taken up the support of individual mis-
sionaries in the homeland. We would most earnestly commend this work to
the liberality of churches and individuals.
The facts are so clearly and so fully set forth in the printed report of the
Executive Committee as to make further details unnecessary. Therefore we
would recommend:
1. That the Assembly again recognize the destitution of our country, the
need of our work, the magnificent opportunities challenging us, and our
growing responsibilities as a Church growing in resources, and call once again
still more urgently for $100,000.00.
2. That this amount be apportioned amongst the Presbyteries, upon the
basis of their combined benevolence and pastors' salaries, as in the past; and
that Presbyteries take the matter earnestly into consideration and strive to
reach, in any way which meets their approval, their full proportionate part of
this amount.
3. That the increase during the year in the number supporting individual
missionaries be noted with pleasure, and the plan be still further commended
to churches and generous individuals as heartily endorsed by the Assembly
and worthy of their liberality.
4. That this Assembly expresses its appreciation of the untiring labors of
our Secretary, Dr. S. L. Morris, who has so faithfully carried the burdens of
the office work, and has also gone through our Church stimulating individual
churches, Presbyteries and Synods. We believe that the development of the
work recently and the impossibility of one man doing efficiently all that is
needed in the way of administration, correspondence and visiting the
churches, Presbyterial meetings; and in view of the urgent necessity of push-
ing vigorously our great Home Mission operations, the Executive Committee
be authorized to secure, if the way be clear, an assistant secretary.
5. That the Assembly instruct the Executive Committee to have itself in-
corporated for its better equipment in order to fill its ever-widening sphere
of responsibility.
6. That in view of the progress made by the secretary appointed for that
purpose by the Assembly, the arrangements be continued, looking to the
adjustment of relations with the Northern Presbyterian Church where the
operations of the two churches touch or overlap.
7. That in answer to the overtures from the Presbyteries of Louisville and
Paris and the suggestions of the Executive Committee of Home Missions
touching evangelistic work, the committee would answer:
(1) That it does not see its way clear to recommend an increase of the
machinery of the Church by the appointment of a new Committee on Evan-
gelization, but does most earnestly emphasize the necessity of the use of the
evangelistic arm of the Church. The committee would urge upon pastors to
engage more frequently in evangelistic services in their own churches, and
call to their aid, as far as practicable, their own brethren in the ministry.
26 MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
(2) That the Assembly recommend the appointment or continuance of
committees on evangelistic work in each Presbytery and Synod.
(3) That the coming year be signalized by aggressive work for the winning
of souls, and that the General Assembly recommend to each church, by
special services or otherwise, to take definite and systematic measures to that
end, and that Presbyteries be instructed to initiate and direct the work, so
far as necessary, and arrange for the conduct of such special services in the
vacant churches.
(4) That the General Assembly recommend that the work in the Sabbath
school and Young People's Societies be conducted with distinct evangelistic
purposes; and that under the supervision of the session of each church such
methods be adopted as will promote the all-important object of bringing the
children and young people to accept and confess Christ.
(5) That the General Assembly emphasize the primary responsibility for
evangelistic effort as resting upon pastors and sessions. At the same time
the Assembly recognizes the use and value of accredited evangelists, and
therefore would urge upon pastors and sessions in arranging for special ser-
vices to invite only such evangelists as are sound in their preaching and
conservative in their methods.
(6) That the committee consist of twelve members and the secretary; that
Rev. S. L. Morris, D. D., be elected secretary; that for the first term the fol-
lowing be elected: T. H. Rice, J. H. Patton, W. A. Powell, and T. P. Cleveland;
for second term of years, C. P. Bridewell, J. T. Plunket, W. P. Inman, M. A.
Candler; for the third term of years, J. G. Patton, A. R. Holderby, C. D.
McKinney, and Charles J. Martin.
8. We recommend the adoption of the following report of the Ad-Interim
Committee on Vacant Churches and Ministers Without Charges:
Your committee, to whom was referred the report of the Ad-Interim Com-
mittee touching vacant churches and ministers without charges, made to the
General Assembly at Mobile, Ala., 1904, with instruction to further consider
the subject and to report with recommendations to the next Assembly (see
p. 34, Minutes of General Assembly), beg leave to submit the following
report:
We have given the subject due consideration in meetings for conference and
by correspondence.
In addition to the valuable information contained in the report of the
former committee on this subject, we have had in response to a published
request suggestions from a number of ministers of sound judgment and
practical experience. These suggestions have aided us in forming conclu-
sions. We have not gone behind the facts contained in the former report on
this subject, but have taken them as a basis for further consideration.
We do not believe that any amendment to our Book of Church Order, Form
of Government, would improve conditions. But we do believe that a more
faithful exercise of the episcopal authority as vested in the Presbytery by our
Book of Church Order in grouping churches and in arranging fields for min-
isters would tend to decrease the number of vacant churches and ministers
without charges.
Observation and experience have shown us that there is no definite method
in use throughout the Church whereby a minister in charge of a church, for
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 27
good and satisfactory reasons, oan change his field of labor with any degree
of ease. Necessity compels many to resort to "candidating" or some similar
method, which is embarrassing both to minister and church.
We, therefore, believe that some plan should be devised by means of which
ministers desiring a change of field and vacant churches can be brought
together in a way that will be pleasant and at the same time secure the
greatest efficiency of our ministerial force in serving the largest possible num-
ber of churches. The great problem is to devise some method by which
every minister available for work may obtain a field of labor adapted to his
ability.
This- is the subject upon which your committee understands that the Gen-
eral Assembly wishes us to make recommendations. In submitting the fol-
lowing recommendations, we are free to say that we do not believe the plan
is perfect, but experience will show us the weak places and in time the plan
can be perfected. We recommend:
(1) That a "Bureau of Information" be established in connection with the
Assembly's Committee of Home Missions.
(2) That this Bureau shall print, not publish, a list of ministers desiring
to change fields of labor and churches desiring ministers.
(3) In the case of the minister the printed statement shall contain (1)
Name ; ( 2 ) Family ;
(3) the names of two persons with whom correspondence may be had with
reference to said minister.
(4) In the case of the church, the printed statement shall contain (1) Num-
ber of members ; ( 2 ) salary ;
(3) if grouped, with what churches?
(5) This printed statement shall be sent monthly to the chairman of Pres-
byterial and Synodica! Committees of Home Missions and to vacant churches,
according to discretion, and to any minister making request for it.
(6) The names of ministers and churches shall appear upon this printed
statement only upon their personal request, and shall remain upon the list
until they notify to withdraw.
(7) The secretary of Home Missions shall in no way be responsible for the
failure of either the minister to make the desired change or the church to
secure a minister. His duty shall be considered discharged when he shall
have printed and mailed the printed statement as herein provided. This
recommendation No. 7 shall appear at the head of this printed statement.
(8) For the expense incurred in printing and mailing this statement, each
minister and church shall pay a fee of $1.00. ,
9. Your committee would recommend that the report of Durant College be
transferred to the Standing Committee on Church and Christian Education,
and that the overture from St. John's Presbytery asking the publication of
an official monthly periodical in the interest of Home Missions be transferred
to the Standing Committee on Publication.
10. As to the overtures from Nashville and Norfolk Presbyteries, that the
Assembly direct its Executive Committees of Home and Foreign and Publica-
tion to give careful consideration to the cause of evangelistic work among our
Hebrew population, the Assembly declines to adopt the request, but urges
upon pastors and sessions to remember them continually in their prayers, and
seek by personal effort their salvation.
-8 MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
11. In response to the overtures from Durant and Indian Presbyteries
touching the better equipment and endowment of Durant College, your com-
mittee recommends that the Assembly authorize the Executive Committee of
Home Missions to secure better equipment and a sufficient endowment.
T. S. CLYCE, Chairman.
The commission to hear the complaint of J. M. Wells and others
against the Synod of North Carolina presented its report, which was
approved, and is as follows :
Fort Worth, Texas, May 22, 1905.
The commission appointed by the General- Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church in the United States to hear the complaint of J. M. Wells and others
against the Synod of North Carolina, met in the Broadway Baptist church, in
Fort Worth, this day, at 4 : 30 P. M.
The commission was opened with prayer. The following members were
present— viz. : C. W. Heiskell, J. W. Rosebro, J. Lowrie Wilson, J. B. Hutton,
J. S. Park, R. E. Lentz, J. F. Smith, A. J. Tynes, Giles Cook, Jr., D. C. Car-
michael, Wm. dimming, Geo. P. Haw, J. M. Holladay, M. McR. McLauchlin,
J. D. Norwood, T. M. Lowry, J. W. Henderson, J. D. McLean, A. B. Morse, and
T. W. Coleman. Present, twenty.
Judge C. W. Heiskell was elected Moderator, and Rev. J. S. Park Clerk.
The Moderator delivered the charge to the commission. Twenty minutes
were allowed to the complainant to open the case and ten minutes to close.
Thirty minutes were allowed the respondent. The record of the cause was
then read. The complainant was heard, the respondent was heard, and the
complainant was again heard. The roll was then called, and an opportunity
was given to the members of the commission to express their opinion. The
vote was then taken, and resulted as follows: To sustain the complaint,
twelve; not to sustain the complaint, seven; excused, one; total, twenty.
The following committee was appointed to formulate the judgment of the
commission: J. W. Rosebro, J. S. Park, and J. D. McLean.
The commission then adjourned to meet to-morrow at 8:30 A. M., after the
reading and approval of the minutes.
May 23, 1905.
The commission met at 8:30 A. M. in Broadway Baptist church, and was
opened with prayer. The same members were present as on yesterday.
The committee to formulate the judgment of the commission made the fol-
lowing report, which was adopted: "The judgment of the commission ap-
pointed to consider the complaint of J. M. Wells and others against the Synod
of North Carolina is that the complaint is sustained on the second ground
therein assigned."
The following dissent was entered upon record: "The undersigned hereby
express their dissent from the finding of the commission." T. M. Lowry, D. C.
Carmichael, C. W. Heiskell. A. J. Tynes, A. B. Morse. J. F. Smith, J. B.
Hutton.
The minutes were then read and approved, and after prayer the commission
adjourned. C. W. HEISKELL, Moderator of the Commission.
John S. Park, Clerk of the Commission.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 29
The second ground of complaint above sustained was against the action of
the Synod in failing to sustain the complaint of J. M. Wells and R. M. Mann
against the action of Wilmington Presbytery. The complainants alleged that
the Synod erred in failing to sustain said complaint.
1. Because the action of Wilmington Presbytery in granting evangelistic
powers under certain conditions was unconstitutional. 2. Because the ac-
tion of Wilmington Presbytery in invading the jurisdiction of the local
session was unconstitutional. 3. Because the action of Wilmington Presby-
tery in receiving members into the Church at large within the settled Church
State is ultra constitutional and dangerous. 4. Because the action of Wil-
mington Presbytery in making color a test of membership is unconstitutional.
The action of Wilmington Presbytery against which J. M. Wells and R. M.
Mann complained was the adoption of the following: "Where any of our min-
isters find colored persons desirous of becoming Presbyterians, and the way
is not open for them to join any of our white churches, resolved, that said
minister acting as evangelist be authorized to receive such colored persons
into the Church, and to recommend them for membership through our Gen-
eral Assembly's Agent for Colored Evangelization to any of our colored
churches willing to receive them." — Stated Clerk.
The records of the Synods of Georgia, South ( Jarolina and Texas
were approved.
The report of the Committee on the Assembly's Home and School
was presented and docketed and made the second order for to-morrow.
The Assembly had recess until 8 P. M., concluding the session with
prayer.
8 P. M.
The Assembly engaged in a popular meeting in the interests of
Home Missions, the Rev. Dr. T. S. Clyce presiding by request of the
Moderator.
After appropriate devotional exercises, addresses were made by the
Rev. Drs. C. R. Hemphill, W. M. Anderson and S. L. Morris, Secre-
tary, and Mr. O. H. Ward, of Oklahoma.
Adjourned with prayer and the benediction until 9 A. M. to-mor-
row.
SIXTH DAY.
Wednesday, May 24, 9 A. M.
The Assembly was opened with devotional exercises conducted bv
the Rev. Dr. F.' B. Webb.
The minutes of yesterday were read and approved.
The records of the Synod of Alabama were approved.
The Committee on the Sabbath and Family Religion presented its
report, which was adopted, as follows :
80 MINUTES OF THE GENEKAL ASSEMBLY.
Your Committee on the Sabbath and Family Religion begs leave to report:
1. On report of the Permanent Committee on the Sabbath and Family Re-
ligion, we recommend the bold, clear deliverance of the committee on the
neglect of the duties and privileges of the Christian Sabbath. We deplore the
conditions which make its criticisms so just.
2. We recommend that our members not only do not use the Sunday mails,
newspapers and trains, but that when opportunity offers we express our
views on the matter to those who use them and to those who are stockholders
in the railway companies and newspapers. Further, we approve the plan
suggested in the overture of the Synod of Florida to the General Assembly
of 1904, asking for a conference of all evangelical churches in the South, and
that all the arrangements be left in the hands of the Permanent Committee
on the Sabbath and Family Religion.
3. We believe that one of the direct causes of many wrecks, so expensive
in lives and property, is that the railway employees are not allowed their
rest of one day in seven, thus overruling the wise provisions of our Creator
to secure the best results in life's labor.
4. We belieAre that giving and going on Sunday excursions should not be
countenanced by Christians. This, together with the reading of Sunday news-
papers, influences many who would otherwise come under the preaching of
the Gospel to neglect their Christian duties.
5. We recommend that each session make renewed earnest efforts to estab-
lish in each home a family altar, also that each pastor urge that the religious
training in the home be not waived on account of the increasing efficiency of
Sabbath school work. We also recommend that whenever the head of a
family be admitted to a church on profession of faith or by letter, he be en-
couraged to establish the family altar, if not already erected in his home.
6. We recommend renewed efforts on the part of church and Sunday school
officers to secure regular attendance on the preaching services by the chil-
dren. H. R. RAYMOND, Chairman.
The Committee on Church and Christian Education made its re-
port, which was adopted, as follows :
Your committee, in answer to the overture from the Prebytery of Green-
brier, touching, first, the appointment of a General Secretary of Church and
Christian Education; second, placing the cause on our regular list of causes
for Church collections; third, seeking to secure, through a secretary, a per-
manent endowment fund for the different academies and colleges, would re-
spectfully report, recommending that the whole subject matter of said over-
ture be referred to an ad-interim committee of five members, to be appointed
by the Moderator, who shall report to the next General Assembly.
F. B. WEBB, Chairman.
The Moderator appointed the following as the ad-interim provided for: L.
H. Blanton, E. M. Green, W. A. Alexander, T. S. McPheeters, and J. D.
Blanton.
With reference to the sixth annual report of the Assembly's Permanent
Committee of Church and Christian Education, this same committee recom-
mend:
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 31
1. That the diligence of the committee be commended.
2. That the Assembly hereby expresses its great gratification at the pro-
gress that has been reported by the Permanent Committee, in the Presbyterial
and Synodical institutions.
3. In regard to the tenth item of the Permanent Committee's report touch-
ing "certain recommendations, which were not definitely adopted or rejected
by the last Assembly," and now brought again to this Assembly, your commit-
tee would recommend that the entire subject matter of said item be referred
to the ad-interim committee already agreed to, in answer to the overture from
Greenbrier Presbytery.
4. We recommend the reappointment of the same Permanent Committee on
Church and Christian Education.
5. We recommend that the treasurer be authorized to pay $61.38 to Rev.
Dr. J. B. Shearer, chairman of the Permanent Committee of Church and
Christian Education, this sum being the amount of expenses incurred by the
committee.
With reference to the request of the Directors of Columbia Seminary, that
this Assembly do not consider the item concerning that Seminary in the
paper of the Atlanta Conference touching the establishment of a university,
your committee recommends that this request be complied with.
With reference to the report of the Trustees of the Presbyterian College of
Durant, we recommend that the Assembly express its appreciation of the im-
portance of the college and its gratification at its progress.
F. B. WEBB, Chairman.
A further report from the same committee touching a proposed uni-
versity at Atlanta, Ga., was docketed and made the order for 10 A. M.
to-morrow.
The Committee on Women's Societies presented and the Assembly
adopted the following; report :
Reports from fifty-four out of the eighty-two Presbyteries in our General
Assembly have been placed in the hands of your committee. From these
fifty-four tabulated reports we are enabled to make the following as the
aggregated whole: Number of societies, 1,167; number of members, 26,308;
contributions as follows: To local causes, $71,279; to Home Missions, $12,424;
to Foreign Missions, $31,388; to other causes, $15,223; total amount con-
tributed, $130,926.
This splendid exhibit from an element which, until recent years, was con-
sidered by our Church a latent force, gives us cause for thanksgiving to the
Great Head of the Church for what our eyes see and for what our ears hear
to-day, and that "the house is filled with the odor of the ointment."
We recommend that the accompanying tabulated reports from the different
Presbyteries be published in the appendix to the Minutes of the Assembly.
W. L. LOWRANCE, Chairman.
The second order of the day was called from the docket and the
report of the Committee on the Assembly's Home and School was
adopted, as follows:
32
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
The Standing Committee on the Assembly's Home and School respectfully
reports that it has examined the report of the Board of Trustees of the Home
and School, and has had conference with the president and superintendent.
The following facts have been ascertained: During the past year there has
been an improvement in the contributions. Exclusive of the balance on hand
April 1, 1904, the receipts have been $8,333.32. In addition to this there have
been received the legacies of Mrs. Mary A. Titcomb of $950.00, and of R. M.
Scruggs of $5,000.00; $465.00 have been paid upon the debt from amounts
remitted for the purpose by the Presbyteries. The balance of indebtedness is
now $2,250.00, as against $17,000.00 some years ago, and $6,000.00 when this
Assembly took up the matter. The total value of the real and personal estate
is $16,150.00. The benefit of the Home and School has been given directly to
fifty children, and indirectly, but substantially, to eight other children and
fifteen widows of ministers, making a total of seventy-three; 496 churches out
of the 3,082 of the Assembly — that is, not quite one in six — have contributed
to this most beneficent work, and only 313 of them outside of Virginia.
Seven churches in Alabama Synod gave $128.34; twenty-four in Arkansas,
$162.56; seven in Florida, $41.48; twenty-nine in Georgia, $254.79; thirty-one
in Kentucky, $346.94; thirteen in Louisiana, $244.72; twenty-four in Missis-
sippi, $224.18; twenty in Missouri, $236.40; sixty in North Carolina, $422.27;
thirty-four in South Carolina, $325.83; twenty-four in Tennessee, $424.39;
thirty in Texas, $231.04, and one hundred and eighty-three in Virginia,
$3,037.45.
The indebtedness as it stood a few years ago was apportioned among the
Presbyteries. Many of these paid in full, and others in part, and some have
given nothing. If the latter classes would meet fully their share of the
obligation the debt would be wiped out at once. Of the children provided
for in the Home and School there are one from Arkansas, six from Brazil,
five from China, five from Georgia, one from Japan, two from ICentucky, five
from Mississippi, six from North Carolina, three from South Carolina, and
sixteen from Virginia. Two recent graduates of the School have been re-
ceived as candidates for the ministry by the Presbytery of Bast Hanover, and
two or three others are contemplating the ministry. The institution and its
work belong to the whole Church. It is not local. The orphaned children
of ministers and children of missionaries of every part of our territory are
provided for, so far as the means permit. It is evident, however, that the
Church at large is ignorant of the work and of the duty resting upon her to
sustain it.
Your committee recommend (1) that the fidelity and efficiency of the
Trustees and officers be approved; (2) that the Church at large be urged to
remember that the work is hers; (3) that pastors be urged to present this
cause to their churches; (4) that each Presbytery be enjoined to appoint a
committee, whose duty it shall be to secure interest and help for this work;
(5) that Presbyteries be urged to pay the balance due on their apportion-
ment; (6) that the fourth Sabbath in December be designated as the day for
collections for the Home and School, and that the Assembly's Publication
Committee be directed to prepare for all series of envelopes embracing the
Assembly's days or months for collections one envelope for this cause.
GEORGE SUMMEY, Chairman.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 33
The report of the select Committee on Closer Relations with Other
Presbyterian Bodies was taken from the docket. That portion of the
report touching Young People's Societies was adopted as follows :
The Committee on Closer Relations, etc., recommend that the Assembly
adopt the recommendation of the Ad-Interim Committee on Closer Relations
touching an overture of St. Louis Presbytery, referred to it last year, pro-
posing some plan of alliance or affiliation of Young People's Societies, as
follows: "We judge it best, for the present, at least, that our young people
be kept, as far as possible, under our own control and training, and that they
be accustomed to the use of our own literature and methods of work."
GEORGE SUMMEY, Chairman.
The report being considered seriatim, the first recommendation was
adopted. Pending the consideration of the second recommendation
the hour for recess arrived and the Assembly receded from business
until 2 P. M.
2 P. M.
The Assembly met and resumed the unfinished business, which was
continued throughout the afternoon session.
The Assembly had recess until 8 P. M., closing with prayer.
8 P. M.
The Assembly engaged in a popular meeting in the interest of For-
eign Missions, Rev. Dr. C. P. Bridewell in the chair, at the request
of the Moderator.
After appropriate devotional exercises, addresses were made by
Secretary Jas. O. Reavis and the Rev. W. II. Sheppard, one of our
colored missionaries in the Congo Free State.
The Assembly adjourned until 9 A. M. to-morrow, with the bene-
diction bv Rev. Dr. Bridewell.
SEVENTH DAY.
Thursday, May 25, 9 A. M.
The Assembly was opened with devotional exercises conducted by
the Rev. Ernest Thompson, D. D. The minutes of yesterday were
read and approved.
The report of the Committee on the Twentieth Century Educational
Fund was read and referred to the Committee on Church and Chris-
tian Education.
The records of the Synod of Tennessee were approved,
c
34 MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
The report of the Committee on Systematic Beneficence was pre-
sented and adopted, as follows:
"We have tabulated all the Presbyterial reports which have come into our
hands, seventy-six Presbyteries out of eighty-two reporting. Bethel, Central
Alabama, Ethel Indian, Nashville and Roanoke send no reports.
The total contributions of the churches for each of the specific causes
named by our General Assembly for the year ending March 31, 1905, are as
follows:
For Foreign Missions, 1,793 churches gave $194,967
For Assembly's Home Missions, 1,640 churches gave 34,718
For Local Home Missions, 1,896 churches gave 156,585
For Colored Evangelization, 1,276 churches gave 12,904
For Ministerial Relief, 1,556 churches gave 22,818
For Education, 1,607 churches gave 94,656
For Publication, 1,379 churches gave 11,502
For Bible Cause, 791 churches gave 6,490
Total $534,640
Compared with last year, the present report shows an increase of $16,303 on
the whole work.
A further comparison shows the following differences:
Foreign Missions, increase of 53 churches, increase $10,406 00
Assembly's Home Missions, increase of 45 churches, increase.. . 2,691 00
Local Home Missions, increase of 65 churches, increase 12,624 00
Colored Evangelization, increase of 31 churches, increase 494 00
Ministerial Relief, increase of 57 churches, increase 31 00
Education, increase of 35 churches, decrease 11,260 00
Publication, increase of 18 churches, increase 1,425 00
Bible Cause, increase of 8 churches, decrease 102 00
The number of churches giving to each cause is as follows:
749 churches gave to 8 causes, as against 677 last year.
456 churches gave to 7 causes, as against 455 last year.
376 churches gave to 6 causes, as against 324 last year.
345 churches gave to 5 causes, as against 295 last year.
296 churches gave to 4 causes, as against 379 last year.
261 churches gave to 3 causes, as against 349 last year.
300 churches gave to 2 causes, as against 257 last year.
317 churches gave to 1 cause, as against 312 last year.
683 churches gave to cause, as against 603 last year.
In answer to the question, Does your Presbytery call upon the churches
which fail to make any collections ordered to give their reasons for failure,
22 answered yes; 19 answered no; 39 make no reply, and 3 answer occa-
sionally.
While the causes of Foreign Missions, Assembly's Home Missions, and
Local Home Missions show gratifying gains, yet your committee feels con-
strained to call the attention of the Assembly to the pronounced falling off
MINUTES OF THE GENEEAL ASSEMBLY. 35
of $11,260 in the contributions for Education, and the further loss in the
Bible Cause.
Your committee recommends that our Stated Clerk write to the Stated
Clerks of the Presbyteries failing to send in full reports upon Systematic
Beneficence, urging them to greater diligence in the preparation and for-
warding of their reports to the Assembly, and insisting upon the use of the
blank forms which are provided for the proper tabulation of the various
causes. T. B. FULLER, Chairman.
The report of the Committee on Colored Evangelization was pre-
sented and docketed.
The report of the Committee on Foreign Missions was presented
and adopted, as follows :
The Standing Committee on Foreign Missions respectfully submits the fol-
lowing report:
1. The information concerning the success, with which this great work has
been prosecuted during the past year by our Executive Committee in Nash-
ville, and by our missionaries in the foreign field, is such as calls for sincere
thanksgiving from all our churches.
2. The General Assembly cordially approves the election of the Rev. J. O.
Reavis Co-Ordinate Secretary of Foreign Missions, and is greatly gratified
to learn that he has already given satisfactory evidence of adequate qualifi-
cations for the important position to which he has been called.
3. Concerning the complaint of the Rev. W. B. Mcllwaine and the Rev. J.
W. Moore against the action of the Executive Committee of Foreign Missions,
authorizing continued co-operation in the Theological Department of the
Meiji Gakuin, your committee recommends that the action of our Executive
Committee be approved. This recommendation is based upon the fact that
the doctrinal unsoundness of the institution referred to has been corrected.
4. Your committee recommends that the action of our Executive Commit-
tee endorsing the establishment of a Theological Seminary at Nanking by
the Mid-China and the North Kiansu Missions of our Church and the
Central China Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of
America, in which Dr. J. W. Davis, of our Church, is one of the professors,
be approved.
5. In regard to the overture from missionaries of the Mid-China Mission,
renewing their request, made to previous Assemblies, that they be permitted
to unite with the native Chinese brethren in forming provincially co-operative
Presbyteries, of which they shall be members, while at the same time re-
taining full connection with their respective home Presbyteries, your com-
mittee would remind the Assembly that this request has already been de-
nied by three Assemblies as inconsistent with our Form of Government. We
recommend, however, as our Executive Committee of Foreign Missions sug-
gests, that the Assembly approve of the expressed desire on the part of our
missions in Korea and China to co-operate with other Presbyterian missions
in the organization of one united Presbyterian Church in each of those
fields; and that it authorize our missionaries to take all such steps as may
be necessary, and in their judgment in conformity with Presbyterian prin-
36 MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
ciples, to secure the independence of the proposed United Presbyterian
churches in Korea and China.
6. In reference to the protest of Rev. Hugh W. White, Rev. H. M. Woods
and Rev. J. W. Bradley against the plan of union of the Presbyterian
churches in China, your committee would recommend that while the zeal of
those brethren for the truth be commended, the Assembly approve of the
entrance of our mission churches into that union, since the evidence seems
to be satisfactory that the doctrinal standards of all the churches entering
into that union are sound and the errors complained of are confined to a few
individuals, and may soon be eliminated.
7. Your committee think it important, since it is impossible to send out
to the mission fields the number of missionaries needed to do the work, that
our missionaries be again urged to do everything possible to develop into
greater efficiency the native churches and Christians.
8. The Assembly records again its cordial approval of the forward move-
ment, and hopes that under the stimulus and direction given by the Secre-
tary having charge of the work in the field still greater results will be at-
tained.
9. It is recommended that the General Assembly authorize its Auditing
Committee to employ an expert accountant to audit the books of the Ex-
ecutive Committee, and that the expenses be paid from the mission treasury.
10. In order to meet the growing needs of our Church, both in the matter
of reinforcing our missions and of providing adequate means for the training
and use of a competent native ministry, the General Assembly hereby calls
upon the Church for a contribution of $275,000 the coming year.
11. We recommend the election of the following Executive Committee for
the ensuing year: Rev. S. H. Chester and Rev. J. O. Reavis, Co-Ordinate Secre-
taries; Rev. W. M. Anderson, C. R. Hemphill, J. W. Bachman, J. H. Lacy,
and Elder W. H. Raymond, for the term of one year; Rev. Wm. Irvine, J. H.
McNeily, G. W. Bull, W. S. Jacobs, and Elder W. G. Adams, for the term of
two years; Rev. J. F. Cannon, E. D. McDougall and Elders G. H. Baskette,
J. D. Blanton, and J. H. Wilkes, for the term of three years.
C. P. BRIDEWELL, Acting Chairman.
The Judicial Commission to consider the complaint of 1ST. D. Thur-
mond against the Synod of Missouri was presented and docketed.
The report of the Committee on Theological Seminaries was pre-
sented and adopted, as follows :
The Presbyterian Church in the United States has five Seminaries — to-wit,
Union, Columbia, Clarksville (Divinity School), Louisville, and Austin. Re-
ports from all these have been received and considered. They show:
1. That all these institutions during the past year have been pursuing
their work with diligence and an encouraging measure of success.
2. The total number of students has been 144, distributed as follows:
Union, 60; Columbia, 19; Clarksville, 12; Austin, 13; Louisville, 40. The
number of graduates is 41, of whom 12 are from Union, 11 from Columbia, 4
from Clarksville, 6 from Austin, and 8 from Louisville.
3. The financial condition of all these institutions is very satisfactory.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 37
That of Louisville, which, has a general fund of $616,049 and endowed scholar-
ships of $28,233, is especially gratifying. All the Seminaries have done
their work without incurring debt.
4. There are several events of especial interest Dr. W. W. Moore has been
inaugurated as president of Union Seminary, and Rev. J. G. McAllister as
adjunct professor of Hebrew at Union. Dr. Reed has resigned at Columbia,
but has been urged to withdraw his resignation and to continue to the
Seminary his valuable services. The health of Dr. Sampson has necessitated
his resignation as president at Austin, and he has been elected professor of
Church History and Polity for the coming year. Dr. Sampson is entitled
to special mention in this report, and to the thanks of the whole Church for
five years of able and energetic and unusually self-denying and successful
administration of a work full of peculiar difficulties which have been sur-
mounted with unflagging zeal. The death of Dr. Smoot is mentioned by the
directors with much feeling as the loss of an honored professor and earnest
supporter, one of Austin Seminary's first and firmest friends. The Rev. E. D.
Brown has been elected to the chair of New Testament Exegesis. At Co-
lumbia affairs are progressing with fresh and encouraging interest. The
determination to press the work of the institution with unabated zeal is
manifest The fact that eleven students go forth from the walls of this
honored institution this year to preach the Gospel is most gratifying. Not
only is there no foundation for the impression that Columbia Seminary
intends to suspend its work, but the report of the directors breathes in
every line a resolute spirit of determination to press forward the work
with added vigor. EUGENE DANIEL, Chairman.
The regular order of business was suspended to take up the order
of the day for 10 o'clock. That portion of the report of the Commit
tee on Church and Christian Education relating to the proposed Uni-
versity at Atlanta was taken from the docket, and the Rev. Drs. J. W.
Walden and Theron H. Rice were heard in advocacy of the scheme.
Upon a motion to adopt the report the Assembly discussed the matter
till 12 o'clock, when recess was had until 2 P. M.
8 P. M.
The Assembly met.
The unfinished business was resumed. The report was amended and
adopted, and is as follows :
Your Committee of Church and Christian Education would report that,
after careful consideration of the paper from certain brethren, Dr. T. H. Rice
and others, touching their purpose and agreement to undertake the estab-
lishment of a university, to have a common relation to the whole Church, for
the promotion of higher Christian education, and asking the approval of the
enterprise by this Assembly, they recommend:
That, while fully sympathizing with the spirit and aims of the brethren
composing the Atlanta Conference, and bidding them God-speed in their
efforts to further the educational interests of our Church, the Assembly does
38
MINUTES OF THE GENEKAL ASSEMBLY.
not at this time deem it expedient to give its formal endorsement to the
proposed scheme for establishing a university for post-graduate work in the
city of Atlanta. F. B. WEBB, Chairman.
The Assembly then took up the unfinished business of yesterday —
viz., the report of the select Committee on Closer Relations, which
occupied the attention of the body for the remainder of the afternoon
session.
The Moderator, in behalf of members of the Assembly, presented
to Mr. IT. P. Eakle, chairman of the Committee of Arrangements,
a suitable token of their appreciation of his kind attentions and effi-
cient services in their behalf.
The Moderator was also authorized, in behalf of the Assembly, to
present a handsome Bible to Master W. A. Alexander, Jr., who has
cheerfully and efficiently served the members as page.
The chairman of the Committee on Leave of Absence presented the
following, which was adopted :
Resolved, That it is the sense of this Assembly that, in view of the great
and important business before us, no commissioner should ask to be excused
from attendance upon the sessions of this Assembly until the business thereof
is finished, except for such reasons as constitute in the mind of such com-
missioner a conscientious conviction of duty calling him away.
It was resolved that the popular meeting to-night be limited to one
hour.
The Assembly had recess until 8 o'clock.
8 P. M.
The Assembly met and after appropriate devotional exercises, en-
gaged in a popular meeting in the interest of Publication and Sabbath
School Work, the Rev. C. R. Nisbet in the chair.
The report of the Committee on Publication, Sabbath Schools and
Young People's Societies was read and docketed.
The Assembly was addressed by Secretary R. E. Magill and Rev.
A. O. Browne, one of our District Superintendents of Sabbath School
Work.
Upon the conclusion of these exercises the Assembly resumed the
unfinished business. Pending this, adiournment was had till 8 :30
A. M. to-morrow. Prayer by Rev. Dr. J. D. McLean.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 39
EIGHTH DAY.
Friday, May 26, 8:30 A. M.
The Assembly was opened with devotional exercises conducted by
the Rev. Dr. J. Lowrie Wilson.
The minutes of yesterday were read and approved.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence presented the following
report, which was adopted :
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence beg leave to submit this their
report. Communications have been placed in our hands as follows:
1. A request from the First General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church
in India, asking that they be "permitted to enter into relations with us by
means of corresponding members.
2. The annual report of "the Western or American Section of the Execu-
tive Commission of the Alliance of the Reformed Churches holding the Pres-
byterian System."
3. The report of a Special Committee of the "Alliance of the Reformed
Churches throughout the world holding the Presbyterian System," "on can-
didates for the ministry."
4. The report of the Special Committee of this Alliance on the subject of
Fraternal Associate Membership in the Evangelical Churches.
5. A letter from the Rev. E. B. Sanford, D. D., Secretary of the "Inter-
Church Conference on Federation," with a communication from the National
Federation of Churches and Christian Workers."
6. An overture from the Suwanee Presbytery asking this Assembly to con-
fer with the Associate Reformed Synod of the South with a view to securing
the organic union of that body with our Church.
7. A letter from the Rev. Isaac P. Brokaw, D. D., Corresponding Delegate
from the General Synod of the Reformed Church in America.
8. A letter from Rev. W. H. Roberts, D. D., to Rev. W. A. Alexander, D. D.,
concerning the observance of the Bi-Centennial of the first Presbytery of the
Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.
9. The report of the delegates from our own Assembly attending the
Alliance of Churches holding the Presbyterian System.
Touching these communications your committee would report and recom-
mend as follows:
1. That the cordial Christian request from the First General Assembly of
the Presbyterian Church in India be granted, and that the Moderator of the
Assembly, the Rev. J. T. Plunket, D. D., be appointed to bear the greetings
and Christian salutations of this Assembly to the General Assembly of the
Presbyterian Church in India.
2. Your committee has considered with care "the annual report of the
Western Section of the Executive Commission of the Alliance of the Re-
formed Churches holding the Presbyterian System," and would express great
pleasure at the contents of this report; and we recommend:
1. That the first Sabbath in November be set apart as a season of special
thanksgiving to God for the blessings bestowed upon so many churches and
40
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
countries from that great religious revival which we call the Reformation of
the Sixteenth Century.
2. That the apportionment of our Church for the annual expenses of the
Alliance (viz., $480) be paid.
3. The report of the Special Committee on Candidates for the Ministry as
made to the Alliance is highly interesting reading, and the presentation of
facts therein presented are worthy of the serious reflection of our whole
Church. There is nothing in the report, however, which calls for action by
this Assembly as appears in this report.
4. We find nothing calling for special attention or action on the part of our
Assembly in the report on Fraternal Associate Membership in Evangelical
Churches, as made to the Alliance.
5. That the communication from the Rev. E. B. Sanford, D. D., Secretary,
and the communication from the National Federation of Churches and Chris-
tian Workers have been considered by the General Assembly in its sittings
in Mobile, Ala., May, 1904, and that this Assembly sees no reasons for other
action upon our part. (Minutes General Assembly 1904, pp. 21, 41.)
6. That we express our most cordial regard for the Associate Reformed
Synod of the South, and our readiness at any time to consider overtures from
this honored body looking towards closer relations with our Church, but in
view of the recent action of this Assembly appointing a committee to present
the willingness of this Assembly to confer with the Associate Reformed Synod
of the South on this subject, and the action of the Associate Synod of the
South responding, the Assembly does not deem it expedient to appoint a
second committee on this subject at this time.
7. 1. We note with pleasure the fraternal spirit manifested in the letter of
the Rev. Dr. Brokaw, of the General Synod of the Reformed Church in
America, and we further note with pleasure the tokens of God's blessing on
the work of the Church he represents.
2. That Rev. S. M. Neel, D. D., principal, and Rev. W. R. Dobyns, D. D.,
alternate, be appointed to bear the Christian salutations of this Assembly
to the General Synod of the Reformed Church in America, to meet June 7,
1905, at Asbury Park, N. J.
8. That the letter of Rev. W. H. Roberts, D. D., to Rev. W. A. Alexander,
D. D., does not appear to be an official letter, and calls for no action on the
part of the Assembly.
9. That the report of delegates from this Assembly to the Alliance of
Churches holding the Presbyterian System be received as information and
their diligence be commended.
All which is respectfully submitted by the committee.
ALEXANDER SPRUNT, Chairman.
The Committee on Bills and Overtures presented the following
report, which was adopted :
An overture from Presbytery of Montgomery, asking the Assembly to re-
quest our Executive Committees to return to the practice of issuing appeals
for their causes on a date immediately preceding the time fixed by the
Assembly for their respective collections.
We recommend that the overture be answered in the affirmative.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
41
A report of the same committee on another overture from Mont-
gomery Presbytery relating to the use of commissions was docketed.
The committee on the report of the ad interim committee appointed
to revise the proof texts of our doctrinal standards made the follow-
ing report, which was adopted :
The special committee to which was referred the report of the ad-interim
committee, appointed to revise the citation of proof texts to the doctrinal
standards of the Church, respectfully report as follows:
As far as time and opportunity at our disposal would allow, we have care-
fully examined the work assigned to us by the General Assembly. It is
obviously impracticable under the circumstances in which we have been
placed to examine in detail and with critical care all this work. The utmost
we could do was to note the rules adopted by the ad-interim committee, and
to ascertain as far as practicable in a general way how these rules have
been observed. These rules, so far as the rejection or selection of proof
passages is concerned, are four — viz.:
1. Reject passages of doubtful genuineness.
2. Reject passages of doubtful interpretation.
3. Reject irrelevant passages.
4. Add other texts where required.
So far as we have been able to judge, the added texts are generally, if not
universally, apt, and are neither of doubtful genuineness nor of doubtful
interpretation. In some instances we have noted that texts which seem to be
of doubtful interpretation or which are irrelevant have not been rejected.
We also find instances in which passages cited have been retained about
which it may be said that their truth, as a part of God's "Word, is not
vouched for by the inspired authors of the books in which these passages
occur. At the same time it is evident that the ad-interim committee have
faithfully and diligently executed the work assigned them, and for this they
are justly entitled to the thanks of the Church.
In view of the fact that it is possible, in our judgment, still further to
improve the work so far admirably begun, we recommend the following
action:
1. That the revision so far accomplished be now assigned to a new com-
mittee ad-interim, with instructions to examine carefully the work already
done, to make further changes as they may deem desirable, with a view to
bring the work still nearer to perfection.
2. That the former committee be commended for their diligence and faith-
fulness; that the thanks of the Church be extended to them for their
efficient work.
3. That the new committee referred to in the first recommendation be
constituted as follows:
Louisville Seminary group: Rev. W. H. Marquess, D. D., Rev. C. R. Hemp-
hill, D. D., Rev. Wm. Cumming.
Union Seminary group: Rev. W. W. Moore, D. D., Rev. C. C. Hersman,
D. D., Rev. F. T. McFaden, D. D.
Columbia Seminary group: Rev. W. M. McPheeters, D. D., Rev. H. A. White,
D. D., Rev. S. C. Byrd.
42
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Southwestern Presbyterian University group: Rev. W. A. Alexander, D. D.,
Rev. W. H. Neel, D. D., Rev. R. Price, D. D.
Austin Seminary group: Rev. R. E. Vinson, D. D., Rev. E. D. Brown, Rev.
M. C. Hutton.
General chairman and secretary, Rev. E. C. Gordon, D. D.
4. That the report of the former committee ad-interim be printed in the
appendix to these minutes, and otherwise as the new committee shall de-
termine.
5. That our officers and courts be requested to examine the work already
done, and to make to the new committee any suggestions which they may
deem desirable to secure further improvement in the citation of proof texts.
6. That the new committee be directed to give due regard to such sug-
gestions, and to report their further revision to the next General Assembly.
E. C. GORDON, Chairman.
The Committees on the Records of the Synods of Florida and Lou-
isiana recommended their approval. Adopted.
The Committee on Church and Christian Education reported rec-
ommending that the report of the Permanent Committee on the Twen-
tieth Century Fund be admitted to the Assembly's minutes as infor-
mation on said subject. That report is as follows :
Your Committee on the Twentieth Century Fund begs leave to report that
gratifying progress has been made in some of the Synods of our Church in
the work of securing funds to be used in behalf of Christian Education.
The Synod of Texas, within whose bounds the Assembly is now holding
its sessions, sent in last year its admirable report concerning work already
accomplished and plans for the future. No additional details can now be
added to that report.
The Synod of Louisiana owns the Silliman Collegiate Institute, and has
taken steps to inaugurate a school among the French population within its
bounds.
The Synod of Missouri makes the following report of progress concerning
this work during the year ending May, 1905:
Westminster College, pledges for endowment $15,450 00 .
Westminster College, pledges for immediate needs 4,640 00
Gifts for current expenses 801 46
Synodical Female College 2,500 00
Elmwood Seminary 500 00
Endowment for new school in the Ozark mountains 4,000 00
Total $27,891 46
In the Synod of South Carolina gratifying success has marked the effort
to increase the endowment of the Presbyterian College of South Carolina.
Steps have been taken also to bring Chicora College under Presbyterial
control.
In the Synod of North Carolina the sum of $168,000 has been pledged,
through the general and special agencies at work; of this amount about
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 43
$90,000 in cash has been paid in. This result shows that nearly three-fifths
of the $300,000 assumed by this Synod as its portion of the General Assem-
bly's Educational Fund has been already pledged.
Your committee is not prepared to furnish details concerning the present
status of the work in the other Synods.
HENRY ALEXANDER WHITE, Chairman.
The committee appointed to frame an amendment to the Form of
Government made the following report, which was adopted, and the
proposed amendment was ordered sent to the Presbyteries with the
recommendation of the Assembly:
The committee appointed to frame an amendment of paragraph 128 of the
Book of Order, to be sent down to the Presbyteries for their adoption, report
the following:
That for the first sentence of said paragraph 128 these words be substi-
tuted: "When any minister shall tender the resignation of his pastoral
charge to his Presbytery, the Presbytery shall cite the church to appear by
its commissioner, or the church may so appear upon its own motion, to
show cause, if any it has, why the Presbytery should not accept the resig-
nation." J. F. CANNON, Chairman.
The Auditing Committee made the following report, which was
adopted:
Your Auditing Committee, to whom was referred the reports of the treas-
urers of the several committees and institutions of the Assembly, together
with other papers relating to the financial interests of the Church, respect-
fully begs leave to report:
1. We have carefully examined the reports of the treasurers of the Execu-
tive Committees of Foreign Missions, Home Missions, Ministerial Education
and Relief Publication, and Colored Evangelization, together with- the re-
ports of the treasurers of the General Assembly, the Assembly's Home and
School, and the Trustees of the General Assembly, and find that they have
all been properly audited and certified to be correct.
2. We recommend the appointment of the following Auditing Committees
for the ensuing year — viz.:
For Executive Committee of Foreign Missions: Geo. G. O'Bryan, Eugene
Hollins, and T. D. Webb.
For Executive Committee of Home Missions: J. B. Daniel, W. R. Hoyt, and
Charles J. Martin.
For Executive Commitee of Publication: H. Swineford, B. C. Wherry, and
Edwin Pleasants.
For Executive Committee of Ministerial Education and Relief: W. S.
MacRea, Shackelford Miller, and Brainerd Lemon.
For Executive Committee of Colored Evangelization: E. B. Nuzum, W. C.
Harris, W. E. Bingham.
For Assembly's Home and School: S. G. Howison, J. N. Barney, and G. H.
Morrison.
44
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Treasurer of General Assembly: B. H. Owen, H. C. Merritt.
Your Auditing Committee would further report:
In reference to the item of the legacy from Mr. Norman T. Leonard, we
recommend that five-eighths of this legacy be given to the Executive Com-
mittee of Home Missions, and three-eighths to the Executive Committee of
Foreign Missions.
We recommend the election of Rev. M. D. Hardin, D. D., George E. Wilson,
and A. G. Brenizer, to succeed themselves as trustees of the General As-
sembly.
Your committee would futher report that the Stated Clerk and Treasurer
of the General Assembly has stated to your committee that the work of his
office has so largely and steadily increased that he feels that he ought to be
granted an allowance for clerical assistance. Your committee, upon looking
into the matter, concludes that his request is reasonable, but believes that it
would be better to put this allowance in the form of an increase of salary,
out of which he can pay for such clerical assistance. Your committee, there-
fore, recommends that the salary of your Stated Clerk and Treasurer be
made $750 (seven hundred and fifty dollars) per annum.
P. B. FETZER, Chairman.
The report of the Committee on the Records of the Synod of Mis-
souri was docketed.
The committee appointed to tabulate the answers of the Presby-
teries to the proposed amendment to the Form of Government made
the following report, which was adopted:
The select committee to tabulate the vote of the Presbyteries on the pro-
posed amendment to the Book of Church Order, paragraph 8, section IV,
chapter V (paragraph 79), recommended by the last Assembly (Minutes, p.
44), would respectfully report that fifty-seven Presbyteries voted "yes" and six
Presbyteries voted "no." A majority of the Presbyteries advise and consent
to the amendment.
The committee recommends that the Assembly does hereby enact the
amendment, making the Book of Church Order, paragraph 8, section IV,
chapter V ( paragraph 79 ) , read :
"The Presbytery shall meet at least twice a year on its own adjournment,
and when any emergency shall require a meeting sooner than the time to
which it stands adjourned, the Moderator, or in case of his absence, death, or
inability to act, the Stated Clerk shall, with the concurrence, or at the
request of two ministers and two ruling elders of different churches, call a
special meeting. For this purpose he shall give notice specifying the par-
ticular business of the intended meeting to every minister belonging to the
Presbytery, and to the session of every vacant church in due time previous
to the meeting, which shall be not less than ten days. Or in the case of the
absence, death, or inability to act of the Moderator and Stated Clerk, any
three ministers and two ruling elders of different churches shall call a
special meeting. And nothing shall be transacted at such special meeting
besides the particular business for which the court has thus been convened."
CHARLES GHISELIN, Chairman.
MINUTES OF THE GENEKAL ASSEMBLY. 45
The records of the Synod of Kentucky were annroved.
The records of the Synod of North Carolina were approved, except
in so far as affected by the judgment of the Assembly in the com-
plaint against the Synod.
The Assembly resumed consideration of the unfinished business,
being the substitute for an amendment to the second section of the
report of the Special Committee on Closer Relations with Other
Presbyterian Churches. The report of the committee was as follows :
Your committee to whom was referred the report of the ad-interim Com-
mittee of Conference on Closer Relations with other Presbyterian Churches,
appointed by the Assembly at Mobile, 1904, with certain overtures from the
Presbyteries of Central Mississippi, Chesapeake, Chickasaw, Lexington, Mis-
sissippi, Western Texas, and others papers pertaining to this subject, would
report:
That it has carefully considered these several papers, and would recom-
mend to the Assembly the following action:
1. That the General Assembly commend the fidelity and diligence of the
Committee on Closer Relations with other Presbyterian and Reformed bodies.
2. That the Assembly continue the Committee on Closer Relations with
Presbyterian and Reformed Churches, increased as hereinafter provided, and
authorize their conference with similar committees of such Churches, should
they be appointed, with the view of perfecting a plan of co-operation, the
results of such conference to be submitted to the General Assembly at its
next meeting.
3. That the Committee on Closer Relations is instructed to give due con-
sideration to all suggestions and criticisms that may be offered by any of our
Church courts, or by any of the officers and members of our Church.
4. That the Moderator of this General Assembly be added to the Com-
mittee on Closer Relations, and that he shall by appointment add to said
committee one member from each Synod not now represented on said com-
mittee. GEORGE SUMMEY Chairman.
The amendment was to add to the second section the following
words :
It is the intention of this item of the report to eliminate federation from
future consideration.
The substitute offered for this amendment was:
In connection with this recommendation the Assembly expresses its in-
ability, under all the conditions, to approve the plan of federation submitted
through the committee of the Pittsburg Conference.
The substitute was lost by the following vote:
Ayes— R. B. Morrow, T. W. Coleman, J. W. Walden, G. L. Carson, C. P.
Bridewell, C. R. Nisbet, H. B. Seawright, S. F. Mayes, S. L. McCarty, O. A.
Bowen, E. P. Miller, H. B. Zernow, J. P. Naylor, Geo. Summey, E. F. Koelle,
46 MINUTES OF THE QENEKAL ASSEMBLY.
S. W. Brown, J. B. Hutton, C. Z. Berryhill, H. H. Watts, R. H. Baker, John W.
Henderson, L. A. Cato, J. E. Hobson, H. L. Morrison, E. P. Bradley, N. D.
Morton, R. S. Eskridge, C. A. Munroe, W. R. McLelland, J. K. Goodman, P. B.
Fetzer, P. R. Law, W. A. Murray, J. A. McMurray, J. W. Paisley, T. B. Fuller,
A. D. Hicks, H. J. Mills, R. H. Brown, S. C. Byrd, Alexander Sprunt, W. R.
Potter, J. M. Holladay, M. McR. McLauchlin, J. Lowrie Wilson, J. G. Law,
A. B. Morse, T. M. Lowry, J. H. Lumpkin, J. G. Garth, R. E. Lentz, W. L.
Lowrance, S. A. King, J. B. Sherrard, Robert Hill, Wm. Risner, P. C. Cole-
man, C. F. Carsner, S. W. Moore, C. W. Hollis, J. E. Douglas, W. McC. White,
John W. Rosebro, S. W. Somerville, Eugene Daniel, J. C. Johnson, J. D.
Arbuckle, James Gwynn, J. E. Booker, G. B. Strickler, Chas. H. Ralston, T. C.
Morton, R. W. Jopling, P. C. Clark, E. B. McCluer, T. S. Wilson, J. J. Wood,
J. C. Painter, F. M. Woods, C. Ghiselin, Giles Cook, B. S. Speck— 82.
Nays — D. C. Carmichael, A. F. Carr, P. J. Hamilton, J. S. Park, F. B. Webb,
F. H. Mohns, J. J. Mitchell, N. B. Keahey, E. C. Bingham, Eugene Cypert, J.
Leighton Green, T. C. McRae, B. W. Martin, J. F. Lawson, D. B. Schultz,
J. S. Sibley, C. O. Groves, F. S. Hall, W. E. Newill, Jas. F. Carmichael, J. H.
Sibley, R. E. Douglas, T. S. Lowry, C. C. Carson, W. T. Spears, C. R. Hemp-
hill, J. S. Lyons, S. Miller, A. R. Carothers, Wm. Irvine, W. C. McAfee, Wm.
Cumming, I. D. Norwood, R. L. Nicholson, H. C. Smith, John F. Smith, J. V.
Patton, H. R. Raymond, E. C. Gordon, J. E. Kerr, T. M. Barbee, F. W. Lane,
C. E. Hickok, Z. B. Penney, J. F. Cannon, W. M. McNutt, S. M. Neel, J. L.
Leonard, W. C. Connell, J. W. McLauchlin, W. A. Cannon, W. H. Belk, R. G.
Matheson, J. W. Goodman, R. M. Mann, T. H. Law, J. J. Vernon, H. L. Shaw,
D. James Winn, J. A. Wilson, W. A. Hunter, J. B. Green, D. C. Kennedy,
J. M. Clark, J. M. Newland, C. W. Heiskell, W. M. Anderson, G. W. Clark,
J. S. Nisbet, J. W. Ratchford, T. S. Clyce, R. S. Price, A. W. Rice, S. F.
Tenney, A. A. Aldridge, J. P. Gibbons, J. V. McCall, C. C. Anderson, R. W.
Coffin, J. D. McLean, W. T. Ahrenbeck, J. G. Storey, A. H. P. McCurdy, A. J.
Tynes, G. P. Haw, Ernest Thompson, C. C. Lewis, D. M. Douglas, Frank Lewis,
W. H. Thomas, J. C. Wysor, J. A. Willett, R. P. Valentine— 93.
Absent or not voting — E. P. Kennedy, T. P. Hay, J. O. Turnipseed, J. T.
Plunket, L. Rolfe, C. E. Barker, L. H. Blanton, John Steele, John Glassell,
Jr., J. P. Sisk, H. P. Wherritt, B. G. Grant, G. McLeod, J. R. Howerton, H. K.
Reid, J. C. Kirkpatrick, T. Mikell, J. M. Brooks, M. S. Cockrill, C. R. Sher-
man, N. Cromartie, J. A. Williams, W. T. Chester, H. R. Borthwick — 24.
The amendment was lost, and the report was then adopted un-
changed.
Recess until 2 P. M.
2 P. M.
The Assembly resumed business. The report of the commission
in the case of 1ST. D. Thurmond vs. Synod of Missouri was called up
and approved. It is as follows :
1 l May 22, 1905.
The commission appointed to try the complaint of N. D. Thurmond against
the Synod of Missouri met at 4:45 o'clock this afternoon, was called to order,
MINUTES OF THE GENEEAL ASSEMBLY. 47
constituted with prayer, and solemnly charged by the chairman. Joseph H.
Lumpkin was elected clerk.
The following members were present: Miller, Sibley, McCurdy, Mills,
Barker, Belk, McLauchlin, McLelland, Cypert, Lyons, Aldrich, Wood, Walden,
Carmichael, Naylor, Berryhill, Green, Potter, Woods, White, Lumpkin.
N. D. Thurmond, complainant, appeared in his own behalf, and D. S. Gage
and E. C. Gordon in behalf of the respondent Synod. The complaint and the
record of the cause were then read, after which the commission adjourned,
to meet to-morrow morning at 8:30 o'clock.
May 23, 1905.
The commission, on the complaint of N. D. Thurmond against the Synod
of Missouri, met at 8:30 this morning, and was opened with prayer, a
quorum being present, as follows: Miller, Sibley, McCurdy, Law, Mills,
Barker, Belk, McLauchlin, McLelland, Lyons, Aldrich, Wood, Walden, Naylor,
Berryhill, Green, Potter, Woods, White, Lumpkin.
Minutes of yesterday were read and approved.
It was resolved, That the original copy of the paper served by the Fulton
church on N. D. Thurmond, his answer to the same, and the printed copy of
the paper of Robert McPheeters and others, being referred to in the record
of the cause, identified and consented to by the parties to this trial, were
admited as a part of the record of the cause.
An hour was allotted to each the complainant and respondents, the division
of the time to be arranged by said parties. Book Church Order, paragraph
269. The commission then adjourned to meet at 9 o'clock to-night.
The commission met at 9 o'clock to-night, and was opened with prayer.
There were present the following: Miller, Sibley, McCurdy, Law, Hay, Mills,
Barker, Belk, McLauchlin, McLelland, Lyons, Aldrich, Wood, Walden, Naylor,
Berryhill, Green, Potter, Woods, White, Lumpkin, Mikell.
The additional papers admitted this morning were read. Complainant,
N. D. Thurmond, was then heard. The commission then adjourned to meet
at 8:30 o'clock to-morrow morning.
May 24, 1905.
The commission met at 8:30 o'clock this morning, and was opened with
prayer, a quorum being present, as follows: Miller, Sibley, McCurdy, Law,
Hay, Mills, Barker, Belk. McLauchlin, McLelland, Cypert, Aldrich, Wood,
Walden, Carmichael, Naylor, Berryhill, Green, Potter, Woods, White, Lump-
kin. E. C. Gordon, representative of the Synod, was then heard, and was
followed by D. S. Gage. N. D. Thurmond, complainant, then closed his argu-
ment.
The roll was then called, and each member of the commission was given
two minutes in which to express his opinion.
The vote was then taken, showing: To sustain the complaint, J. H. Lump-
kin — 1; to sustain in part: W. R. McClelland. W. McC. White, Townsend
Mikell— 3; not to sustain: Shackelford Miller, J. S. Sibley, A. H. P. McCurdy,
J. G. Law, T. P. Hay, H. J. Mills, C. E. Barker, W. H. Belk, J. W. McLauchlin,
Eugene Cypert, A. A. Aldrich, J. J. Wood, J. W. Walden, J. F. Naylor, C. Z.
Berryhill, J. L. Green, W. R. Potter, F. M. Woods— 18.
J. F. Carmichael at his own request was excused from voting. G. W. Cook.
J. S. Lyons, J. F. Smith, and P. J. Hamilton were absent.
48
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
The following committee was appointed to formulate the judgment of the
commission: Shackelford Miller, S. H. Sibley, A. H. P. McCurdy, J. W. Wal-
den, W. McC. White, J. H. Lumpkin.
The commission then adjourned, to meet immediately after this after-
noon's session of the General Assembly.
Commission met at 5:15 P. M., a quorum being present. The committee
above appointed submitted the following, which was adopted by the com-
mission as its judgment in the case:
The commission to which the complaint of N. D. Thurmond vs. the Synod
of Missouri was referred for trial reports as follows:
1. Under the fifth section of the call of January 19, 1904, for a meeting of
the Presbytery of Missouri, "to consider a petition of certain members of
the Fulton church, asking Presbytery to assume original jurisdiction over
said church and to make such investigations into the present condition of
the church as Presbytery may deem necessary, in order to make all such
orders as may be necessary to restore peace and harmony and to secure the
future spiritual edification of the said church," it is the judgment of the
Assembly that said Presbytery properly took original jurisdiction under
section 77 of the Book of Church Order, and had jurisdiction to "demit with-
out prejudice the official functions" of the elders of said church, which action
amounted to no more than a dissolution of the official relation. (Assembly
1894, p. 196, Alexander's Digest, Supplement, p. 34.)
2. That the action of the Synod of Missouri in not sustaining the com-
plaint of said N. D. Thurmond was correct; and
3. That said N. D. Thurmond's complaint to this Assembly be not sustained.
The minutes of yestrerday and to-day were read and approved, and the
minutes of all the sessions of the commission were adopted as a whole.
Adjourned with prayer. SHACKELFORD MILLER, Chairman.
Joseph H. Lumpkin, Clerk.
The report of the Committee on Bills and Overtures touching the
papers on commissions referred to this Assembly by the last Assem-
bly was taken from the docket and adopted. It is as follows :
Resolved, That the following substitute for section 7, chapter V, of the
Form of Government, be sent down to the Presbyteries with the advice
and recommendation of the Assembly thereto, as an amendment to the Form
of Government:
92. — I. Any church court has the right to use subordinate agencies for doing
work which must be done, and which it is not feasible for the court itself
to do. These agencies, although differing in their constitution, powers, and
rules of procedure, are all committees, and responsible to the court which
appoints them.
93. — II. Ordinary committees consist of any number of persons appointed
by a court, whose instructions determine their work and their quorum. The
powers of such committees are either to prepare work for the court by ex-
amining into matters referred to them, reporting and recommending action
for the courts, or to execute work which the court has ordered to be done.
To committees, therefore, may be referred any subject on which a court
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 49
wishes information and recommendations; and they may be charged with
the administration of the general work of evangelization undertaken by a
court.
94. — III. A commission is a body of Presbyters appointed by a court for a
particular work, whose rules of procedure shall always be the same as those
of the court which appoints it, and whose quorum shall consist of the same
number of persons as that of the court. It has power to examine, consider,
and judge the cause submitted to it, and its judgment goes into effect as soon
as it is pronounced. Full records of its proceedings shall be kept and re-
ported, and be subject to the review of the court, which review shall be
limited to questions of law, with the right to appeal or complain to a superior
court as in other cases. When a commission's report shall have been ap-
proved, it shall be entered upon the minutes of the court as its record of the
case. The ordination of probationers to the ministry and the trial of ju-
dicial cases may be submitted to a commission. Appellate courts, however,
shall not commit a case of appeal or complaint to a commission for trial
without the consent of both parties, nor shall they appoint on a commission
to try such a case any member of the lower court from which the appeal or
complaint comes.
95. — IV. The following subjects may, at the discretion of the court, be re-
ferred to either an ordinary committee or to a commission — viz., taking
evidence in judicial cases, organizing new churches, including the ordination
and installation of Ruling Elders and deacons, installing ministers, and
visiting churches and correcting disorders in them. But in all cases com-
missions shall be governed by the rules of 94 — III.
Further amend Rules of Discipline, paragraphs 179 and 215, by inserting
"committee" (with proper connective) before the word "commission" wher-
ever the latter word is used in them.
The following was taken from the docket and adopted :
The Committee of Bills and Overtures would report, on the overture from
the Presbytery of Montgomery, in regard to installing by commissions, that
the matter having been answered by the Assembly in 1897, no further de-
liverance is necessary. See Digest, chapter II, page 610.
The following resolution was adopted :
Resolved, That the secretaries of Executive Committees elected at this ses-
sion of this Assembly are chosen for a period of three years, in accordance
with the previous action of the Assembly providing that "the tenure of the
office of secretary shall be for a period of three years, beginning September
1st following the sessions of the Assembly at which the secretary was
elected."
The Committee on the Narrative made a report, which was adopted.
See Appendix.
The report of the Committee on Colored Evangelization was taken
up and adopted, as follows:
The Standing Committee on Colored Evangelization have had placed in
50 MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
their hands the minutes and the annual report of the Executive Committee,
a communication from the Northeast Georgia Presbytery of the Afro-Ameri-
can Presbyterian Church, asking, among other things, that the reports of
that Church be printed in the Assembly's minutes; and another from the
Presbyteries of Athens and Augusta and Pee Dee, touching increased interest
in the work of Colored Evangelization.
We are glad to note from the report of the Executive Committee that the
past year has been one of progress, the gifts of the people to this important
cause having increased more than twenty per cent The work of Stillman
Institute has gone forward, notwithstanding the difficulties in the matter of
an adequate teaching force. The Church must emphasize this institution,
which is the central agency for effecting results in behalf of the negro. It
should be more thoroughly equipped in the way of buildings as well as.
teachers. Other educational work is also going on successfully, particularly
in the Ferguson Williams College, at Abbeville, S. C.
The evangelistic branch of the work has had 43 ministers regularly em-
ployed, and regularly supplying more than 150 churches, and we rejoice
to record that 227 have been added to the churches on profession of faith.
A number of Sunday schools, under the conduct of white teachers, are
being carried on here and there, and it is hoped that this pioneer method of
evangelization will be more generally and persistently prosecuted throughout
the whole Church. The whole amount contributed to this cause last year
was $10,699.45, being an increase of $2,086.56 over last year. We can speak
without qualification of the faithfulness and efficiency of our worthy secre-
tary, Rev. J. G. Snedecor. We recommend the following action:
1. That the minutes of the Executive Committee be approved.
2. That the Assembly ask our churches for $20,000 for the coming year.
3. That the Stated Clerk be authorized to publish in our minutes the
statistics of the Afro-American Church.
4. That in answer to the overtures touching the enlargement of the work
of evangelization, and in accordance with the manifest needs at Stillman
Institute, the Assembly would urge upon the Executive Committee the im-
mediate employment of an additional professor at the institute, in order
that the secretary may be freed as far as possible from the management of
the affairs of the same, so as to carry out the wishes expressed in the over-
tures before the Assembly touching the enlargement of the work of colored
evangelization, and we herewith transmit these overtures to the Executive
Committee as indicating the mind of the Assembly in this matter.
5. We recommend the election of Rev. J. G. Snedecor as secretary for the
ensuing three years.
6. We recommend the following Executive Committee — For one year: John
Van Lear, N. L. Anderson, T. W. Coleman, D. N. McLauchlin; for two years:
Sterling J. Foster, J. H. Miller, R. D. Johnston, E. H. Sholl; for three years:
A. A. Little, J. W. Stagg, L. S. Handley, J. E. Jones.
The records of the Synod of Missouri were approved.
The report of the Standing Committee on Publication, Sabbath
Schools and Young People's Societies was taken from the docket and
adopted, as follows :
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 51
Your Committee on Publication and Sabbath School Work beg to submit
the following report:
PUBLICATION.
During the first twelve months of residence in the new building your
publication work has prospered.
Sales in the book and periodical departments were as follows:
Book Department $48,186 96
Periodical Department 57,120 07
Total $105,307 03
The increase over previous year was 13,105 39
The net profit of the year's business was 10,753 78
The gain in profit over previous year was 2,268 56
There was expended in the benevolent work of the committee $5,988.32 in
excess of the collections received from the churches and Sabbath schools,
this deficit being made good out of the earnings of the business department.
The number of new volumes issued during the year was not so large as in
previous years, owing to directions of the last Assembly relative to the pro-
curing in advance of two-thirds the cost of new books of doubtful selling
qualities. This has had a tendency to check the offering of new manuscript.
We would call special attention to two new issues, "A Year in Europe,"
by Rev. W. W. Moore, D. D., and "Discussions of Theological Questions," by
J. L. Girardeau, D. D. The former was published without financial risk to
the committee, and has met with such a cordial reception as to have already
reached its third edition.
Our Sabbath school publications have received special attention during the
year. The "Earnest Worker" was enlarged from a 32 to a 40 page form,
with a promised enlargement July 1st to a 48 page form. The "Junior
Quarterly," designed to meet the needs of scholars between the primary and
senior departments, was added to the list of our publications. The "Home
Department Quarterly" increased its subscription from 9,400 to 16,500 during
the year. We call attention to the following extract from the report of
Secretary R. E. Magill:
GRADED LESSON HELPS.
"The addition of the "Junior Quarterly" to our series of lesson helps en-
ables us to set before the Church a graded treatment of the International
Lesson adapted to the graded system, which is becoming an essential feature
of all thoroughly organized Sabbath schools. Beginning with the Primary
Quarterly and the Picture Cards, and extending to The Quarterly and the
Earnest Worker, there will be found separate treatment of the lesson by
specialists in each department adapted to every age and degree of advance-
ment in Bible study."
There was a gain last year in the circulation of our literature of 150,000
copies.
In this connection we would call attention with pleasure and pride to the
able editorial staff now engaged upon our Sunday school publications: Rev.
R. A. Lapsley, editor in chief; Rev. Walter W. Moore, D. D., Critical Notes
on Old Testament; Rev. Wm. H. Marquess, D. D., Critical Notes on New
52
MIXUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Testament; Mrs. Elizabeth Preston Allen, editor Children's Friend and Pearls
for the Little Ones; Misses Annie H. and Margaret Rankin, editors of Junior
Quarterly; Mrs. W. C. Edmondson, editor Primary Quarterly; Rev. A. L.
Phillips, D. D., editor of The Colors.
SABBATH SCHOOLS.
Under the able leadership of our General Superintendent of Sabbath
Schools, this work has been positive and aggressive. Following the policy
outlined to the Assembly in 1904 and approved by that body, the energies of
the work have been devoted to the perfection of Presbyterial, Synodical and
District organizations, and in conducting an educational plan looking to an
improvement in the quality of work done by our Sabbath schools.
In this connection we would call attention to the splendid service rendered
by Revs. Wm. Megginson and A. O. Browne, District Superintendents of Sab-
bath School Work for Districts No. 2 and Xo. 3, respectively.
In the educational work special attention has been paid to the placing of
libraries wherever possible, and the attention of our weak churches is called
to the circulating libraries, enabling all to secure the best reading at small
cost.
One hundred and seventy-six institutes have been held by the superin-
tendents. Teacher training has been emphasized, so that 47 classes in 12
Synods have been organized, with an enrollment of 631 teachers. We would
commend this as a work of vital importance.
There have been placed in our hands reports from 7G Presbyteries, 6 Pres-
byteries failing to report, and 2 sent in incomplete reports. From those in
our hands we gather the following:
Number of Sabbath schools 1,956
Officers and teachers enrolled 18.587
Scholars enrolled 149,884
Total enrollment 168,471
Additions to communion (76 Presbyteries), 5,293, an increase over number
reported last year by 84 Presbyteries of 557. Assuming the missing Presby-
teries will show at least the same membership as last year, we should have a
total enrollment of 186,190. With six Presbyteries missing, the total en-
rollment is larger than last year by 2,740.
The amounts contributed by these schools is shown to be:
Current expenses § 64,244
Foreign Missions 15,802
Home Missions 8,052
Assembly's S. S. Work 3,977
Other causes 24.383
Total collections $116,344
YOUNG PEOPLE'S SOCIETIES.
Upon examination of reports from Young People's Societies, we find the
following facts:
Reports from five Presbyteries are missing, while the following three Pres-
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 53
byteries have made no reports on this subject for two years: Athens, Indian,
and Potosi. Prom reports in hand we gather the following:
Number of societies 1,014
Total membership 22,865
Contributions to all causes $30,923
Missing Presbyteries reported last year 59 societies, a membership of 1,934,
and contributions of $5,533.
Reports from Woman's Societies were called for by the last Assembly, and
many Young Ladies' Societies heretofore reported as Young People's Socie-
ties will this year appear in the reports of Woman's Societies. For this
reason comparison cannot fairly be made with reports of former years.
We recommend the approval of the "Manual of Rules of the Executive
Committee," with such modifications on pages 3, 4 and 16 as shall harmonize
the Manual with the recent enactments of the General Assembly.
We find the minutes of the Executive Committee neatly and correctly kept,
and recommend their approval.
RECOMMENDATIONS.
Your committee would respectfully recommend:
1. That the Assembly direct the pastors and sessions to appeal to the
churches to raise $20,000 during the year for the support of Publication
and Sabbath school work.
2. That the Assembly reiterate its instructions of last year relative to
caution in accepting manuscript of books and procuring two-thirds of the
expense of publication of such as are doubtful as to profit in cash or ad-
vanced subscriptions.
3. That special attention be called to Sabbath School Day, the first Sabbath
in October, and that pastors and churches be urged to make it an occasion
with the following ends in view:
(a) To bring every member of the Church into vital touch with the Sab-
bath school, and enlist them in some of its activities.
(b) To reach and enroll the children and young people in the vicinity
who are not members of any Sabbath school.
(c) To plan for better methods of work and a specific endeavor to quicken
the spiritual life of the members of the school.
(d) To make a generous offering for the support of the Sabbath school
mission work of the Assembly.
4. We recommend the Sunday school literature published by our committee
as taking rank with the best helps published, and as being best adapted to
meet the peculiar needs and teaching of our Southern Church, and we would
urge the use of this literature in all our schools.
5. With reference to the 60,000 or more volumes of books and tracts which
constitute "a valuable asset lying idle," we recommend that the Executive
Committee be authorized to make a partial disposition of the same during
the present year, reporting to the next General Assembly a plan for future
disposition.
6. That the Church be urged to make large use of the resources of the
Committee of Publication by ordering books, periodicals, Church and Sab-
bath school supplies through this agency, as every order so placed is a con-
tribution to the extension work of the Church.
54
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
7. We recommend the adoption for the ensuing year of the policy out-
lined by the General Superintendent of Sabbath Schools and Young People's
Societies, which policy is as follows:
(1) The development of the district work as rapidly as the funds in
hand permit.
(2) Vigorous effort to organize Teacher Training Classes in every school.
(3) Systematic effort to develop the missionary interest of the young
throughout the Sunday school.
(4) The universal celebration of Sabbath School Day, first Sunday in
October, with large collections for Sabbath school missions.
(5) Special effort to enlarge our schools by the organization of Cradle
Rolls, Home Departments, and Young Men and Young Women's Bible Classes
during the month of October, 1905; and special effort under the direction of
the superintendents and pastors in connection with each communion season,
1906, to bring pupils to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ.
(G) Assembly's plans for Young People's Societies again commended to
the churches.
(7) The more effective organization of Synodical and Presbyterial Com-
mittees.
8. That the General Assembly recommend to the Executive Committee to
appoint Rev. A. L. Phillips, D. D., General Superintendent of Sabbath School
and Young People's Societies.
9. We recommend that the following constitute the Executive Committee
of Publication and Sabbath School Work: Mr. R. E. Magill, Secretary and
Treasurer (appointed for a period of three years) ; for a period of one year:
Rev. S. K. Winn, D. D., Rev. T. C. Johnson, D. D., Geo. Bryan, S. H. Hawes,
Rev. F. T. McFaden, D. D.; for a period of two years: Rev. G. B. Strickler,
D. D., John S. Munce, J. W. Sinton, Rev. A. L. Phillips, D. D., Rev. J. W.
Rosebro, D. D. ; for a period of three years: Rev. J. P. Smith, D. D., Rev.
Russell Cecil, D. D., Rev. Jere Witherspoon, D. D., Rev. J. C. Stewart, D. D.,
and Mr. M. M. Gilliam.
OVERTURES.
The following overtures have been placed in the hands of your committee
for consideration:
1. From the Presbytery of Paris, asking for the addition of a column in the
Assembly's Statistical Reports for Dismissals. We recommend that the re-
quest be declined.
2. From the Presbytery of Tuscaloosa, asking "that a column be put in our
minutes and report on Systematic Beneficence and Statistical Report for con-
tributions to Orphans' Homes." We recommend that the request be de-
clined.
3. From the Presbytery of Tuscaloosa, asking that bound copies of all
minutes of this Assembly be presented to the Congressional Library. We
recommend that the Stated Clerk be instructed to furnish from this time a
bound copy of our minutes annually to the Congressional Library, and that
he attempt to collect from the Church at large copies of the minutes for the
past years, and, binding these in volumes of suitable size, present same to
said Library as rapidly as collected.
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 55
4. From the Presbytery of Fort Worth, asking tor the establishment of a
branch or distributing agency in the city of Fort Worth for the handling of
Sunday school and other literature for the Western portion of our Church.
We recommend that the request be answered in the negative.
5. From the Presbyteries of St. John and Augusta, asking for the publica-
tion of an "official monthly publication that shall cover all branches of the
work of our Church, at a cost not to exceed seventy-five cents per annum."
We recommend that the request be declined.
6. From the Presbytery of Norfolk, asking that the Assembly "commend
to the consideration of the Committee of Publication the issuance of a Young
People's weekly, which shall compare favorably with similar papers of other
Churches." We recommend that this matter be referred to the Publication
Committee, to be dealt with as they deem best.
7. From the Presbytery of Atlanta, asking that a committee be appointed
"to prepare a suitable hymn and tune book for use in our Sabbath schools."
We recommend that the matter be referred to our Committee of Publication,
with instructions to investigate and report to the next General Assembly.
Respectfully submitted,
CHAS. R. XISBET, Chairman.
The report on Ministerial Education and Relief was taken from the
docket and adopted, as follows :
The Standing Committee on Ministerial Education and Relief respectfully
report:
1. That the official paper placed in our hands shows that the consolidation
ordered by the last Assembly was consummated at the time and place, and
in the manner indicated. And we would note the helpfulness and hearty
co-operation of the two former committees in this consolidation. Especially
would we make mention of the faithfulness of Elder G. W. MacRae, of Mem-
phis, who so efficiently served the Church as Treasurer of the Committee of
Education for some twenty-odd years.
2. The first annual report of the new committee is a cause for general
satisfaction; and it reveals some very interesting facts. It gives a full ac-
count as to the number of beneficiaries of the Education Fund, the amounts
they have received, and the institutions they have been attending. It fur-
ther states that there are on file in the office the names, addresses and other
information regarding 311 young men who are now under care of the Presby-
terians, and 51 additional young men who have definitely decided to give
their lives to the work of the ministry. We commend the diligence of the
secretary and committee in securing this valuable information. We further
note with pleasure that President Walter W. Moore will prepare a new
booklet on "A Call to the Ministry." There is great need that more of our
young men consider entering the ministry, and we need our best young men
for this work, and would lay this matter upon the hearts of all parents, that
their children may be offered for this service, if the Lord please to call them.
We especially commend the secretary for his activity and energy in present-
ing his causes to the institutions of learning and congregations of the As-
sembly, and trust that he will be able to give more and more time to the
work in the field.
56
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Education Fund. — We call attention to the decrease in the receipts for the
year, which may be partly accounted for by the change. And we express the
hope that another year will show a great increase in this direction. We
recommend that $30,000.00 for this cause be apportioned among the Pres-
byteries.
Relief Fund. — We are glad to note "a good degree of progress in the work
of relief during the year." There was an increase in the annual fund of
$2,698.22; and an increase of appropriations of more than $2,000.00. When
we look over the number and character of those helped our hearts are deeply
moved by the appeals of this cause; 42 ministers, 108 widows of ministers,
170 orphan children of ministers are largely dependent upon this fund. We
recommend that $30,000.00 be apportioned among the Presbyteries for this
cause.
We fear that the lack of interest and liberality shown towards this cause is
due to the failure of our ministers to earnestly present the obligation of the
Church to care for her faithful and enfeebled servants. We, therefore, recom-
mend that the Assembly hereby urge the ministers to see that the claims of
this cause are faithfully presented from the pulpit at an opportune time for a
liberal response.
Endowment Fund. — $3,345.44 was added to the Endowment Fund last
year, which now amounts to $25,325.84. We urge those of our people who
have been blessed of God in worldly goods to consider making large gifts to
this fund. And we recommend that the committee carefully consider any
reasonable business plans whereby this fund may be largely benefited. We
urge all our pastors, elders and deacons to consider the evident wisdom of
this form of annuity insurance in which the Church pays the premium and
our beloved needy ones get the benefit. We recommend that the Assembly
reaffirm its opinion that in view of the fact that many of our beneficiaries
are women, and many are little children whose fathers were faithful in the
Lord's work, that Ladies' Societies, Young People's Societies, and Sabbath
Schools should manifest definite interest in this work by contributing to these
causes.
3. In answer to the overture from the Synod of North Carolina, we recom-
mend that the second Sabbath of November, the month in which the collec-
tion is taken, be observed as a special day of prayer for schools and col-
leges, when pastors may lay the call of the Gospel ministry upon the hearts
and consciences of young men and press home to the hearts of the people the
duty of contributing generously to these important causes.
4. We nominate the following as the Executive Committee for the ensuing
year — for one year: N. M. Woods, J. S. Lyons, Edwin Muller, W. H. Miley,
J. W. Tyler; for two years: W. Y. Davis, John Stites, James Quarles, C. F.
Huhlein, Bennett H. Young; for three years: W. J. Rubel. G. H. Mourning,
Wade Sheltman, T. M. Hawes, M. B. Porter.
5. We nominate Rev. Henry H. Sweets as Secertary for three years, and
John Stites as Treasurer for the ensuing year.
Respectfully submitted, WM. M. ANDERSON, Chairman.
The following resolution was taken from the docket and referred
for consideration to the next Assembly:
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. 57
Resolved. That a Judiciary Committee, consisting of nine persons, be ap-
pointed by the Moderator, to whom all charters of incorporations under the
authority of the General Assembly shall be referred for examination and
approval before incorporation, and such other business as the General Assem-
bly may determine.
The following was adopted by a rising vote :
Resolved, 1. That the Assembly takes pleasure in giving expression to its
appreciation of the generous and splendid hospitality of the citizens of Fort
Worth shown to its members during the sessions of the Assembly.
2. That it is the sense of the Assembly that the largeness of Texas is only
surpassed by the large heartedness of the Presbyterians of Fort Worth.
3. That our thanks are tendered to the efficient Committee of Arrange-
ments and to the pastors and officers of the churches of this city, who have
opened their pulpits to the members of this Assembly.
4. That this Assembly also expresses its thanks to the railroads for liberal
rates of travel, and also the representatives of the press for their full reports
of our proceedings.
5. That the Assembly express, by a rising vote, its appreciation of the
genial, impartial and efficient manner in which its Moderator has presided
over its deliberations, and to the clerks, who have so faithfully served this
Assembly.
The Committee on Leave of Absence presented the following report,
which was approved :
The Standing Committee on Leave of Absence would report that we have
excused the following commissioners from further attendance upon the ses-
sions of this Assembly: After May 22d, J. R. Howerton and John Glassell, Jr.;
after May 23d, W. Y. Chester; after May 24th, C. R. Sherman, J. C. Kirk-
patrick, and N. Cromartie; after May 25th, T. P. Hay, L. Rolfe, and John
Steele. J. D. McLEAX, Chairman.
The following resolution was referred to the ad interim ( 'ommittee
on Closer Relations.
Our representatives are requested to seek to have the basis of representa-
tion in the committee of co-operation or council of federation established,
not upon the numerical strength of each denomination entering therein, but
upon the principle which will give the smallest church representation with
equal the largest, after the analogy of representation of the several States of
the Federal Government in the Senate of the United States of America, where
the smallest, Rhode Island, for example, has the same representation with
the largest in area, Texas, and most populous in inhabitants, New York.
The Moderator appointed the following to serve as additional mem-
bers of the ad interim Committee on Closer Relations: Rev. W. J.
McKay, D. D., Rev. W. McF. Alexander, D. D., Hon. T. C. McRae.
The following resolution was adopted :
58
MINUTES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Resolved, That until otherwise ordered, the price of the Minutes of the
Assembly for parties outside of our bounds, commercial houses, etc., shall
be $1.00; for parties within our bounds, 50 cents; for members of the As-
sembly and for clubs ordered by a Presbytery for all of the sessions of the
Presbytery, 25 cents. A free copy shall be sent to the ministers reported on
our roll.
The records of the Synod of Mississippi were approved.
The minutes of to-day were read and approved.
The Assembly, after singing, prayer and the Apostolic benediction,
was dissolved and another was called to meet in like manner in the
First church, Greenville, S. C, on the third Thursday in May, 1906.
at 11 o'clock A. M TITOS. H. LAW. Permanent Clerk.
W. A. Alexander, Stated Clerk.
APPENDIX.
I. REPORT OF THE TREASURER OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY FOR
THE YEAR ENDING MARCH 31, 1905.
The following is a summary of receipts and disbursements for the year:
Dr.
To balance on hand April 1, 1904 $ 523 36
To collections on tax of 1905 87 46
To collections on tax of 1904 1,925 77
To collections on back dues 463 42
To sale of minutes of 1903, net 4 100 96
To amount returned 2 00
Total $3,102 97
Cr.
By payment on minutes of 1904 $ 811 34
By office supplies and incidentals 10S 50
By travelling expenses 42 75
By salaries of clerks 650 00
By expenses of ad interim committees 834 35
By contribution to Western Section of Alliance 200 00
By expenses permanent Committee on Church and Christian Edu-
cation 66 95
By postage and stationery 22 70
By express, telegram, and long distance telephone 12 76
By printing 14 00
By balance in hand 339 62
Total $3,102 97
The following thirteen Presbyteries are in debt to the treasury: Arkansas,
$17.83; Bethel, $56; Concord, $2.43; Dallas, 65c; Ebenezer, 4Sc; Fayette-
ville, $79.93; Greenbrier, $27.40; King's Mountain, $22.88; Louisville. $55.51;
Mecklenburg, $163.63; Muhlenburg, $6.33; South Carolina, $41.34; Western
District, $113.59; total, $587.80. This is the smallest sum of arrearages your
treasurer has ever had to report. Four of the thirteen are indebted for
amounts less than $10 each. It will be observed that only a part of the
voluntary contribution of the Assembly to the Western Section of the Ex-
ecutive Commission of the Alliance for the year has been paid, though we
closed the year with a sufficiency in hand to meet this expense in full. This
is due to the fact that only a few days before closing our books did sufficient
funds come into hand, thus throwing the balance of the remittance over into
60
APPENDIX.
next year. Assuming this amount, $265, to be paid, it will be seen that the
receipts of the year, $2,579.61, fall short of the expenses, $3,028.35, by $448.74.
As we begun the year with a balance of $523.36, this leaves a balance for next
year of only $74.62. This excess of expenditure over income is due to the
fact that the expense of the Conference and other ad-interim committees has
been more than $800, for meeting which unusual sum the Assembly made no
special provision. But by good collections and economical expenditures the
past few years we had accumulated a balance sufficient to meet this burden,
to furnish a copy of the annual minutes free of cost to every minister on
the roll of the Church, and leave a balance of $74.62 over and above the un-
paid appropriation above mentioned. The plan of free distribution of the
minutes has proved entirely feasible and given great satisfaction. Under
the careful management of Mr. Magill in letting the contract for printing and
superintending the work, it has not proved to be burdensome to the treasury,
and we recommend that it be continued. We suggest, however, since the
maintenance of the plan is dependent on prompt and full payment of their
assessments by the Presbyteries, that after this year such free copies be not
sent to the members of any Presbytery that is in arrears for its assessment
for the previous year. There are dues unpaid on 1904 from nine Presby-
teries, aggregating $387.81. Four owe for 1903 $86.38; three owe for 1902
$32.58; three for 1901 $27.03. The only unpaid dues for years prior to 1901
are from one Presbytery, and amount to $54. The total of outstanding assess-
ments is $587.80. Respectfully submitted,
W. A. ALEXANDER, Treasurer.
April 1, 1905.
II. ABSTRACT OF THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COM-
MITTEE OF HOME MISSIONS FOR THE YEAR ENDING
MARCH 31, 1905.
We are again permitted to report the close of another year of signal pros-
perity. Each year exceeds the record of the preceding. The generous gift
last year of $25,000 from one noble Christian woman carried our receipts far
beyond anything in the past. We scarcely hoped for a repetition of such
generosity so soon again; and yet a legacy of $25,000 this year from the same
sainted woman carries our receipts even beyond last year by $3,585.53. We
are pleased to report in many sections the outpouring of the Spirit, resulting
in many accessions to the churches assisted from our treasury.
GENERAL FINANCIAL STATEMENT.
Total in the hands of the treasurer during the year $99,946 80
Made up as follows:
Balance April 1, 1904, for Home Missions $ 2,924 72
Balance April 1, 1904, for Moore Fund 1,986 31
Receipts in cash for Home Missions 68,328 47
Payment on Moore Fund loans 707 30
Railroad bond and note 26,000 00
$99,946 80
APPENDIX. 61
DISBUBSEMENTS.
Expenditure for Home Missions, including Church erec-
tion $37,967 43
Moore Fund church loans 550 00
Expense account (see treasurer's report, page — ) 4,991 11
Balance in treasury March 31, 1905 56,438 26
$99,946 80
Made up as follows:
Cash on hand for Home Missions $ 3,345 82
Bond and notes 51,000 00
Moore Fund 2,092 44
Grand total $99,946 SO
From contributions, $40,427.47; from loan fund, $769.25; legacies, $25,-
581.75; interest on bond and note, $1,550.00. Total receipts, $68,328.47.
The progress of the work during the past year may be judged from the
following: Average annual receipts for the first seven years of the present
plan of operations, $30,109.84; average annual receipts for the last lour
years, $51,203.19.
The expenditures for Home Missions were as follows :
For the support of 5 missionaries and 14 churches among the Mexicans;
56 ministers and 181 churches in Texas; 21 ministers and 42 churches in
Arkansas; 17 ministers and 40 churches in Florida; 17 ministers and 46
churches in the Indian Territory; 2 ministers and 4 churches in Georgia;
4 ministers and 19 churches in Mississippi; support of 8 schools and 20
teachers in the Indian Territory, and 10 schools and 27 teachers in the
mountains. The entire number of ministers and teachers supported in whole
or in part was 171, and the whole number of churches aided 348.
For some years the Committee has been appropriating annually $2,000 for
aiding weak churches in erecting houses of worship; but this amount is
utterly inadequate to the demands upon us and the needs of the Church.
The following were assisted during the closing year:
Galax, Va., $100; Jonesboro, Ark., $100; Lanette, Ala., $200; Dimmet,
Texas, $512.50; Cooper, Texas, $100.10; Petty, Texas, $50; Sabinal, Texas,
$50; Miles, Texas, $100; Rowe, Texas, $486.50; DeRidder, La., $100; Brown
Memorial, W. Va., $50; Lovelady, Texas, $100; Brooksville, Fla., $250; Kirby,
Ark., $100; Hondo, Texas, $50. Total, $2,349.10. Several of these smaller
amounts were loans and to be returned when convenient.
In addition to these amounts there was expended on Durant College, lots
and buildings, $273.25. Grand total, $2,622.35.
The General Loan Fund is a small amount, which is lent over and over
again without interest, but is so small that we cannot accomplish much
through this agency. Only two or three churches secured aid by means of
it the past year. The Moore Fund continues intact. After more than ten
years of service the principal remains the same and has gone out in sub-
stantial assistance to many a weak and struggling church and returned to
us again to aid others still.
It affords us pleasure to report that Mrs. Sarah C. Ball, of Fort Worth,
62 APPENDIX.
Texas, who gave us the largest donation eighteen months ago ever made to
our Home Mission work, has again remembered our cause. At her request
her name was withheld during her life; but she now has gone to her reward,
and left to this cause $25,000, which is also the largest legacy it has ever re-
ceived. According to the requirements of her will this fund has been in-
vested by the committee, and the interest is to be used in the prosecution
of our work.
Arkansas, Florida and Texas are still receiving the larger share of our
funds; but we have been compeled to enlarge the sphere of our operations,
taking in other Presbyteries in the older Synods. Consequently aid has
been extended to Presbyteries in Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Mis-
sissippi and Tennessee; whilst there has been a still further widening of
the field aided in the appropriations promised the various Presbyteries for
1905.
In Indian Territory and Oklahoma the Presbyterian Church has prospered
greatly, as will be seen by the fact that four years ago we had twenty-four
churches in the Territory and now have forty-six, an increase of nearly
100 per cent. During the past twelve months revivals have taken place in
a number of these churches, adding many to the roll. Four years ago these
churches contributed only $1,120. The last statistics reported $6,188, an
increase of nearly 540 per cent.
Our Mission Schools continue to prosper, in both sections of the coun-
try: In the Indian Territory; and in the Mountains of Georgia, Tennessee,
Kentucky, and North Carolina. Among the Indians several of the schools
during the past year, became self-supporting and received no aid. This was
partly owing to appropriations made by the U. S. Government in behalf of
the whites as well as the Indians, and partly due to the rapid development
of towns with their public school system, which justified us in withdrawing.
This reduced our number from 11 schools to 8, with 20 teachers and 1,010
scholars. Durant Presbyterian College is counted as one of these, having
seven teachers and 300 scholars, 200 of them being Indians. The college
bhilding is worth about $15,000, and occupies a whole block in the city of
Durant. A boys' dormitory, with 25 rooms, occupies a half block adjoining,
whilst a girls' dormitory about two blocks distant is crowded to its utmost
capacity. The latter, however, is not owned by the college, being private
property. Neither dormitory is adequately furnished. The president was
compelled during the term to turn away about 70 pupils for lack of ac-
commodations. The college is practically self-supporting, but that means
the most scanty allowances as salaries for the hard-worked teachers.
Through the continued liberality of one generous individual your com-
mittee was enabled to maintain in the mountain section of the country 10
schools, with 27 teachers, and 1,218 scholars. This gift of $2,000 was con-
ditioned on the raising of the same amount by the Secretary, who was more
than successful, the aggregate amounting to $4,500. The schools assisted
were Nacoochee Institute, Ga.; Jackson, Breathitt county, Ky.; Plumtree
and Lees-McRae Institute, N. C, and the Presbeyterian Schools ctf Ashe-
ville Presbytery. Not a dollar of this $4,500 comes from the Home Mis-
sion Treasury of the Church. It is made up solely of voluntary individual
gifts.
APPENDIX.
63
The two evangelists, Revs. R. D. Campbell and W. S. Scott, and the three
Mexican pastors, have been faithfully at their post in the fields they respec-
tively occupied at the beginning of the year.
Mr. Campbell's impaired health has made his work very trying, and the
constantly fluctuating Mexican population has been another circumstance
that has militated against his work in Laredo.
Mr. Scott has had eight churches under his care, besides outlying preach-
ing points, with no assistance except his faithful Mexican elders. Progress
has been made all along the line. Two churches were built, one at Sabinal
and the other at Hondo, by the members themselves, under Mr. Scott's
superintendence.
One hundred members were added to the Mexican churches this year.
Three young men are preparing for the ministry. Besides these three the
Presbytery of Ft. Worth recently took under its care a young Mexican, a
member of the Broadway Presbyterian Church of Fort Worth, who"m they
are educating for the ministry.
At the last meeting of the Assembly its attention was directed to the fact
that a Japanese colony had settled near Webster, Texas, and the Assembly
instructed your committee to take the matter up and see what could be
done to give them the Gospel. Arrangements have been concluded with Rev.
Yakichi Sasakura to live among this colony for at least four months, minis-
tering to them spiritually. Our committee will watch this experiment with
great interest, and hopes for good results.
The evangelistic branch of work has been pushed as far as our funds
would permit.
The following evangelists have been supported in whole or in part from
our treasury: Rev. E. C. Bingham, Arkansas Presbytery; Rev. J. D. Flem-
ing, Ouachita Presbytery; Rev. T. C. Johnson, Pine Bluff Presbytery; Rev.
J. E. Wylie, Washbourne Presbytery; Rev. J. W. Rosborough, Florida Synod;
Rev. J. P. Doggett, Holston Presbytery; Rev. W. S. Red, Brazos Presbytery;
Rev. F. T. Charlton, Dallas Presbytery; Rev. O. G. Jones, Ft. Worth Pres-
bytery; Rev. E. B. Fincher, Paris Presbytery; Rev. A. H. P. McCurdy, West-
ern Texas Presbytery; Revs. W. S. Scott and R. D. Campbell, for the Mexi-
cans of Texas; Rev. C. E. Hotchkin, Indian Presbytery; Rev. W. T. Matthews,
Durant Presbytery, and Rev. H. S. Davidson, in Oklahoma.
Our forward movement has not only maintained itself, but made some
progress. Not a single church has abandoned the work, which "has put
its hand to the plow;" and several others during the year have joined in the
effort to extend "our advance line." The First Churih, Memphis, which
largely inaugurated the movement, still leads in the good work. Individ-
ual missionaries are now supported by the Ladies' Society, Central church,
Atlanta; North Avenue, Atlanta; Knoxville Third; Sherman First; Dallas
First; Independent Presbyterian, Savannah; Athens, Ga.; Memphis Third:
Moultrie, Ga.; St. Joseph First; Ladies' Society, Richmond, Second; C. E.
Graham; Miss A. Q., and "Memorial." This is an increase of four during
the year.
The following sent valuable boxes aggregating hundreds of dollars to in-
dividual missionaries:
64: APPENDIX.
Athens, Ga.; First Presbyterian, Lynchburg, Va.; Franklin St., Baltimore
(three); Grand Ave., St. Louis (two); Church of Covenant, Richmond;
Covenanters, Hot Springs, Ark.; Earnest Workers, Charlottesville, Va.; St.
Joseph, Mo.; Bryan, Texas; Dallas First, Texas; Mt. Washington, Md.;
Second Presbyterian, Little Rock, Ark.; Crowley, La.; Misses Holderby, Mrs.
R. Q. Mallard. Many societies sent boxes, supplies, clothing, etc., which are
not reported to us.
The pleasure afforded us in reporting larger contributions to our work,
increasing each year over the previous, is offset by the demands upon us
growing faster than our income. Our assets have increased from $26,915.95
in 1901 to $68,328.47 in 1905. Our appropriations have increased from
$28,079.37 in 1901 to $43,820.00 in 1905. But the demands now amount to
more than $50,000 for actual needs, and would go to $75,000 if we could
undertake anything like the new work opening up; and this does not take
into account the weaker Presbyteries in the older Synods, which have been
patiently waiting for years till our funds would justify appropriations in
behalf of their destitutions.
That in view of the development of the work recently and the impos-
sibility of one man doing efficiently all that is needed in the way of admin-
istration, correspondence, and visiting the churches and Presbyterial meet-
ings; and in view of the urgent necessity of pushing vigorously our great
Home Mission operations, the committee be authorized to secure, if the way
be clear, an assistant secretary, who shall have charge of the department
of literature, supplies and visitation of the churches, societies, etc., for
the purpose of stimulating them to greater effort, in order that the secre-
tary himself may be free to devote more time and effort to administration,
correspondence and superintendence of the mission fields.
That the Assembly take into consideration the advisability of authoriz-
izing the committee to take steps to have itself incorporated for its better
equipment, in order to fill its ever widening sphere of responsibility.
The Assembly at Lexington, Va., two years ago — having referred to
your committee the matter of a general evangelistic movement for the
whole country, co-operating with other evangelical churches, your commit-
tee has given the matter attention and thought at a number of sessions,
and would respectfully recommend for the consideration of the Assembly
the outline of a plan modelled after that of our brethren of the Northern
Church.
III. ABSTRACT FROM THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE OF PUBLICATION AND SABBATH-SCHOOL WORK.
We formally occupied and opened our new building on March 26, 1904,
so this report is a record of a year's work under new conditions and with
enlarged facilities for conducting our business. Many new problems pre-
sented themselves, and the year has been spent in an attempt to adjust
ourselves to the changed conditions, and to meet in an adequate way the
growing demands of the Church for grants of religious literature and for aid
in Sabbath-school mission work.
APPENDIX.
65
An attractive retail department was opened in the first floor of our new
building, and we have received a generous support from the citizens of Rich-
mond. Through our own publications and the Church papers, and by means
of catalogues and circulars, an extensive advertising campaign was carried
on, and we attempted to educate the membership of the Church to the fact
that we are entitled to their support, and that an order to us helps the
extension work of our Church. The enlarged volume of business in the
book department came principally from sales of books of other publishers,
and we are again forced to report that aside from hymn books, catechisms,
and standard publications there has been a very limited demand for books
of our own issue.
Sales in our book and periodical department were as follows:
Book department $ 48,186 96
Periodical Department 57,120 07
Total $105,307 03
The increase over previous year in volume of business was $ 13,105 39
The net profit of the year's business was 10,753 78
The gain in profit over previous year was $ 2,268 56
We appropriated $5,948.32 of the earnings of the business department to
the benevolent work of the committee, this being the amount spent in
excess of the collections received from the churches and Sabbath-schools.
We charged off $1,500 of the value of our furniture and fixtures and made a
further reduction of $1,000 in the. stereotype plate account, as it is our policy
to carry non-productive assets at merely a nominal value.
We did not issue as many new volumes as during previous years, and the
wise regulation of the last Assembly, directing us to secure in advance two-
thirds of the cost of new books of doubtful selling qualities, has had a
tendency to check the offering of new manuscripts.
The total number of pages printed for all departments, including our
Sabbath-school periodicals, exceeded fifty million.
Manuscripts have been accepted for the following books, which will ap-
pear during the coming year:
Modern Mysticism, by Rev. J. B. Shearer, D. D.
The Blue Flag of the Covenant, by Rev. R. P. Kerr, D. D.
The Creed of Christ, by Rev. R. V. Lancaster.
The year has witnessed many improvements in our series of Sabbath-
school helps and an encouraging increase in our subscription list.
As promised in the last annual report, the Earnest Worker was enlarged
from a 32 to a 40 page form, and among other improvements we note the
printing of the text of the American Standard Revised Bible and the addi-
tion of a department of instruction on blackboard work. This helpful mag-
azine will be further enlarged on July 1st to a 48-page form.
We added on July 1, 1904, a new Junior Quarterly to our series, de-
signed to meet the needs of scholars between the primary and senior depart-
ments. The preparation of the lesson treatment for this new quarterly
E
66
APPENDIX.
was assigned to the Misses Rankin, who are recognized authorities on sub-
ject matter and methods in primary and intermediate departments, and for
several years they conducted these two departments in the Sabbath school
of the Second Presbyterian, Charlotte, N. C. The favor with which this
new help was received indicates that it met an existing need. For the first
number we had 5,000 subscribers, and for the fourth issue 18,000 copies were
required to fill our orders. The Home Department Quarterly has increased
its circulation from 9,400 to 16,500 during the year, an encouraging evidence
of the rapid growth of this important branch of Sabbath-school activity.
The addition of the Junior Quarterly to our series of lesson helps en-
ables us to set before the Church a graded treatment of the International
Lessons adapted to the graded system, which is becoming an essential fea-
ture of all thoroughly organized Sabbath-schools.
The following now constitute our Editorial Staff:
Rev. R. A. Lapsley — Editor-in-Chief.
Rev. Walter W. Moore, D. D. — Critical Notes on Old Testament.
Rev. Wm. H. Marquess, D. D. — Critical Notes on New Testament.
Mrs. Margaret Preston Allan — Editor Children's Friend and Pearls for
Little Ones.
Misses Annie H. and Margaret Rankin — Editors Junior Quarterly.
Mrs. W. C. Edmondson — Editor Primary Quarterly.
Rev. A. L. Phillips, D. D. — Editor of The Colors.
The enlargement and improvements in our periodicals and the increase
in our editorial staff represent an increased cost of over $4,000 per year,
but we are giving the Church and schools this improved service without
changing the price of any of our publications.
The following table shows the circulation of our periodicals for the year:
Earnest Worker 350,000
Children's Friend 1,375,000
Pearls for Little Ones 1,640,000
Lesson Quarterly, Senior 250,000
Junior Quarterly (New) 40,000
Primary Quarterly 105,000
Home Department Quarterly 44,000
Lesson Leaves 1,726,000 .
Bible Picture Roll (Sets) 1,600
Pictorial Bible Lessons 1,510,000
Leeper's Lesson Pictures 182,000
Scripture Text Chains 152,000
The Colors for Y. P. Societies 2,500
Total 7,378,100
The gain for the year is about 150,000 copies.
This is the first full year we have had the subscription list in our own
hands, and the wisdom of making this change is clearly demonstrated by
the direct touch we now have with our schools, the increase in subscrip-
tions, and our ability to devote the profits of publication to the benevolent
work of the Church.
APPENDIX.
67
One of the most helpful services we have been able to offer our Sabbath
schools is the plan inaugurated during the year of renting select libraries
to such schools as do not wish to purchase a supply of books outright. We
offer the schools the privilege of selecting their books from a list of titles
which were examined by a careful and competent committee, and which
represent a sifting of the wheat from the chaff. The eager way in which the
schools are availing themselves of this privilege is an evidence that the plan
will prove helpful in a high degree.
We are charged with the duty of donating literature to needy Sabbath-
schools and promoting the general Sabbath-school interest of the Church
through field workers, so far as the Church supplies us with funds for this
important work. In addition we are directed to give Bibles and Testaments
for the perfect recitation of the Catechism, and such ministers as apply are
to be supplied with tracts for free distribution to the amount of $5.00 per
year. During the past year we received the following offerings:
From 1,214 Churches $ 8,979 85
From 512 Sabbath-Schools 3,937 50
Miscellaneous 315 63
Total $13,232 98
The collection shows a gain of $667.13 as compared with last year. The
number of Sabbath-schools reporting collections taken is considerably less
than last year (512 against 1,002), and the amount received from this source
shows a decrease of $2,397.66. The reason given for this decrease was that
our collection followed soon after the special offering for the new Lapsley
Boat Fund, and the schools could not be aroused to make special effort for
Sabbath-school missions. An encouraging feature is the increase both in
the number of the churches making an offering for our work and in the total
amount received. Last year 956 churches gave $6,061.63, while this year we
received $8,979.85 from 1,214 churches, a gain of $2,918.22 from this source.
We donated Sabbath-school periodicals to the amount of $3,001.70 to Sab-
bath-schools, ministers, and missionaries. We now have on our donation list
106 schools receiving free supplies in whole or in part, and in these schools
are enrolled about 5,000 scholars. Twenty-three of these schools were organ-
ized during the past year. During the year a number of mission schools
reached a point of self-support, and asked to be transferred from the free
to our paid subscription list. We donated books, Bibles, tracts, hymn books,
and Sunday-school libraries to the value of $3,263.85. In this amount is in-
cluded 651 Bibles and 2,321 Testaments donated for perfect recitation of
the Catechisms.
In accordance with the policy outlined to the General Assembly of 1904,
our energies have been largely directed to the work of perfecting the Pres-
byterial, Synodical, and District organizations, and in conducting an educa-
tional campaign looking to an improved quality of work In our Sabbath-
schools. Rev. Wm. Megginson, of Kentucky, was secured as District Super-
intendent of Sabbath-School Work in District No. 2, comprising the Synods
of Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi, and entered upon his
duties January 1, 1905. Rev. A. O. Browne gives his entire time to the work
68
APPENDIX.
in District No. 3, comprising the Synods of Texas, Louisiana, Missouri, and
Arkansas, and information from pastors and workers at points visited by
these brethren indicate that they have rendered efficient service. Nine other
workers were used for portions of the year in Virginia, North Carolina, Ken-
tucky, Indian Territory, Georgia, and South Carolina, and two Presbyteries
were aided in conducting colportage work in their own bounds.
The following is the financial summary of the benevolent work of the year:
Expenses.
Donations of Periodicals $3,001 70
Donations of Books, etc 3,262 85
Salaries of Field Workers 7,225 00
Expense of Field Workers 2,760 50
Expense for Institute Work 1,216 75
Expense in connection with Special Collections for Mite
Boxes, Programmes, Postage, Express, etc 1,356 75
Printing, Postage, etc 397 75
$19,221 30
Receipts.
Collection from Churches and Sabbath-Schools $13,232 98
Contribution from Business Department Presbyterian
Committee of Publication 5,988 32
$19,221 30
For two years a faithful effort has been made to put into circulation the
accumulation of over 60,000 volumes of books and tracts issued since the
organization of this work. Prices were reduced from 25 to 75 per cent., but
without creating an appreciable increase in the demand. This stock repre-
sents about $17,000 of the $27,000 we have invested in books, and in a com-
mercial sense it is practically a dead asset. A generous policy of donating
these books to young ministers and a liberal distribution of the stock in
mission fields would tend to correct popular errors concerning our Church,
and at the same time promote vital godliness. The books should be circu-
lated even though donating them should impair the capital invested in the
publication work.
The Assembly has a fixed schedule and policy as to time for taking the
benevolent collections in the Church, and it is contemplated that the Execu-
tive Committees shall issue notices concerning their cause during, or just
preceding, the month in which the offering is to be taken. The importance
of all the benevolent causes warrant great zeal in seeking for financial sup-
port, but the custom of issuing emergency calls out of season is confusing
to the Church, and tends to diminish the offerings for all causes. A number
of special calls are usually issued just at the close of the Church year, and
as the collection for the publication cause is set for March, these special
calls have a tendency to interfere with our collection. The attention of the
Assembly is respectfully directed to the matter, with the hope that the evil
may be corrected.
We submit for the consideration of the Assembly a Manual of Rules gov-
erning your Committee in the enlarged work it is now conducting.
APPENDIX. 69
Mr. G. R. Cannon, appointed by the last Assembly a member of the Execu-
tive Committee, declined to serve on account of his health, and the vacancy
was not filled by the Committee.
Abstract of the Annual Report of the General Superintendent of Sabbath
Schools and Young People's Societies.
An earnest effort has been made to carry out the instructions and sug-
gestions of the last General Assembly. As our work develops, the work
in my office becomes more filled with complex details. The listing and
filing of catalogues, leaflets, books, reports, programmes, and pictures, con-
taining necessary information, require close and intelligent attention. My
correspondence is large and increasing, and by taking needed initiative it
may be developed to almost any extent. It embraces all phases of Sunday-
School and Young People's Work, and requires much time and patience.
1. Field Work. (1) District. — The division of the territory covered by
our Church into three districts has proved wise and practical. In District
No. I., embracing the Synods of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, Florida, I have tried to meet the most pressing demands for work
in addition to my work of general supervision. For District No. II., embrac-
ing the Synods of Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi, we were
fortunate in securing the services of Rev. Wm. Megginson, of Elizabeth-
town, Ky. He entered on his work with intelligence and vigor January 1,
1905. He was cordially received by pastors and workers, and has given an
amount and quality of service in every way satisfactory. His headquarters
are in Nashville, Tenn. In District No. III., Rev. A. O. Browne, District
Superintendent, has been tireless in activity and in the highest degree help-
ful to all whom he has touched.
The method pursued in the District Work is in brief this: By correspond-
ence with the Presbyterial and Synodical Chairmen, the District Superin-
tendent decides what territory he will enter and lays out his itinerary. He
plans to spend from one to three days at certain central and strategic points,
endeavoring to secure the attendance of delegates from neighboring
churches. Sometimes alone, sometimes in connection with local workers, he
gives instruction and exhortation as to the principal lines of progressive
Sunday-school work. He exhibits books, maps, charts, leaflets, pictures,
and whatever else may be necessary to show the people what an equipment
means. Wherever the Church officers think it wise he takes up a collection
to help pay his expenses.
Such excellent results have attended this work that its rapid extension
is greatly desired. Districts I. and III. might very profitably be divided
into two, thus making five in all. It is not the purpose of the committee to
undertake additional work along these lines until the money is actually in
hand for its permanent prosecution.
(2) Local. — In addition to the district work, for a part of the time we
had missionaries at work in the Synods as follows: In South Carolina Rev.
L. H. Query, in Georgia Mr. John Mable, in Kentucky Mr. J. G. Barkley, in
Texas and Indian Territory Rev. P. H. Burney, in the Afro-American Presby-
terian Synod (in South Carolina and Georgia) Rev. E. W. Williams, colored.
These brethren carried stocks of religious books, which tbey sought to sell
as they journeyed. Careful study revealed the fact that this part of the
70
APPENDIX.
work was very expensive in view of the financial returns. We felt, too, that
the money could be better used in distinctive Sunday-school work. We,
therefore, dropped this work with the purpose of renewing it later on dif-
ferent lines. These brethren did their work with most commendable fidelity,
and deserve the grateful praise of the whole Church.
During the year three msisionaries have been engaged in certain destitute
localities. Rev. H. C. Brown has worked in Montgomery Presbytery, and
Messrs. James E. Robinson and J. H. Davis in Concord Presbytery, the last-
named giving a part of his time. Messrs. Robinson and Davis have kept
their schools open amongst rugged mountains with bad roads to develop into
permanency certain schools before organizing many new ones, and have been
greatly blessed in their efforts.
2. Educational — Libraries. — The field work which has been done has a
high educational value. Everywhere that our workers have gone they have
sought to improve the Sundaj T -school libraries and to establish new ones
where possible. Through careful and most intelligent work by Prof. W. D.
Smith, of Bon Air, Va., we have been able to make a classified and descrip-
tive catalogue of books. We have devised a system of circulating libraries
by means of which schools may secure the use of a library for a limited
period at a low cost. Our efforts have resulted in a large increase of sales
of libraries.
Institutes. — Our Superintendents during the year have held 175 institutes,
and many were held without their presence. An institute usually lasts from
one to three days, and takes under consideration, in greater or less degree,
the whole life of the school, dealing in detail with such subjects as Sunday-
School Control and Organization, Equipment, Instruction, Worship, and
Methods of Work, and Young People's Work in general.
Teacher Training. — After full consideration and examination our Commit-
tee secured a Teacher Training Course of our own. It is the work of men
supposed to be experts, and is used by several of the Presbyterian churches
of this country. The first volume appeared in September, 1904. Since that
time at least forty-seven classes in twelve Synods have been organized, with
an enrollment of 631 teachers. We have sold nearly 2,000 copies of the
book. Of course this is but the merest beginning of this vast enterprise.
The second volume, containing the course for the second year's study, is now
in preparation. The committee is offering examinations on this course and
will gladly give a diploma to any one who will successfully pass both years'
examinations.
Below are submitted some valuable statistics concerning our field work:
Synods, worked in 13
Presbyteries, worked in 53
Conferences and Institutes held 175
No. Schools represented 400
No. Delegates present 2.457
Total attendance 43,152
Ministers present 350
Addresses made 592
Sermons preached 74
APPENDIX.
71
New schools established 12
Schools visited 76
Home Departments established 76
Cradle Rolls established 60
Teacher Training Classes, estimated 75
Libraries put in 43
Miles traveled 43,252
Traveling expenses $2,760
Expense of Institute Work $l,2io
Salaries $7,225
Everywhere special emphasis has been laid upon the value of the Sun-
day-school as an evangelistic agency, and our workers have on every suita-
ble occasion presented the claims of Jesus to obedience to old and young.
We cannot get accurate statistics on this detail, but rejoice to say that God's
blessing has rested signally upon these efforts.
Owing to the widely different objects of our Young People's Societies,
their varying forms of organization, and the very great difficulty of securing
full and accurate information concerning them, it is not possible to give a
satisfactory account of their work. After searching carefully for information,
I can report that last year there were reported 73 Westminster Leagues with
2,122 members, and 132 Christian Endeavor Societies with 3,734 members,
scattered over the whole Church. They meet more or less regularly every
week for a young people's prayer and praise meeting. They hold mis-
sionary meetings for studying the facts of missions, for prayer, and for
giving. They are engaged in various forms of church work and sometimes
have regular Bible study. Imperfect as this work and organization often
has been, it is still true that it has been instrumental in training young men
and women for enterprising and progressive leadership.
During the year nineteen new covenanters companies, with an enrollment
of 281, have been added to the list. Two companies with twenty-six mem-
bers have disbanded. Within a period of ten years 128 companies have been
organized, with an approximate enrollment of 2,757.
I have been unable to get reports this year from more than seventy-three
companies. The total enrollment of fifty-six companies at present is 1,147.
Some thirteen companies have permanently or temporarily disbanded. In
nearly every instance suspension is due to lack of leadership. In two cases
changes in population had taken the boys out of reach and others had not
been gathered in. So far as I know, a company very rarely disorganizes
because the boys lose interest.
Out of a total membership of 1,147, there were 127 additions to the Church.
This distinctive work for boys and young men has passed the experimental
stage and has won a right to the approval and confidence of the Church.
It is my most earnest conviction that the Covenanter work should be fos-
tered in every way that is proper. I sincerely hope that the time is not far
distant when we may be able to appoint a special agent for the organization
and development of this essential work.
Miriams. — Up to the present there have been organized twenty chapters
of the Miriams. Perhaps in most of our churches the girls have already
72
APPENDIX.
organized into working bands for one purpose or another. It has not been
considered wise to propose a change of organization when the existing work
is fruitful and approved by the pastor and session. Where new work has
been undertaken and the opportunity could be used, I have tried to estab-
lish the Miriams. The chapters now in existence have been quite active
and are hopeful for the future. The following statistics give some idea of
what has been done.
Total number Miriam chapters organized since 1902 21
Total enrollment Miriam chapters since 1902 294
Total chapters organized in year ending March 31, 1905 11
Total enrollment of same 134
Conferences. — In order to unite and educate the mind of the Church with
reference to our young people's work, a series of conferences on the Bible
and Christian work has been planned. Under the auspices of the Union The-
ological Seminary, Richmond, Va., I conducted a conference in the Grace-
Street Presbyterian church, Richmond, May 11-15, 1904. At this time we
sought to bring together some of the strongest men in the Church to give
instruction and inspiration on such themes as Bible Study, Presbyterian Doc-
trine and Government, and Evangelization. An elaborate exhibit of literature
and appliances for church work was made.
At the earnest request of the workers in the fields, I consented to conduct
a conference at Plumtree, August 24-28, 1904. Here in an arbor built for
the purpose, for four days a band of workers met the eager crowds of peo-
ple, discussing such subjects as Christian Education, Sunday-School Work,
Church History, Doctrine and Government, and preaching the Gospel day
and night. An exhibit of literature was also made. Under the authority of
Mecklenburg Presbytery and in co-operation with the ministers and other
workers in Charlotte who provided a special fund for expenses, I organized
a Young People's Conference on the Bible and Christian Work, which was
held in the Second Presbyterian Church and the City Hall, February 22-2o,
1905. The programme was so arranged that there were daily discussions on
Prayer, Bible Study, Mission Study, Presbyterian History, Doctrine and Gov-
ernment, Sunday-School Work, Young People's Societies, together with strong
missionary addresses. In the City Hall a great exhibit of missionary curios
was made most attractive by the use of booths. Tables contained a well
selected lot of books, leaflets, etc., illustrating the best modern methods ot
Church Work.
Other Conferences. — During the year I had the privilege of attending the
Men's Student Conference and the Woman's Student Conference, the one
meeting at Waynesville and the other at Asheville, N. C, in June, 1904,
and the Men's Student Conference at Lakeside, Ohio, in June, 1904, and
the Men's Student Conference, at Ruston, La., in December, 1904. These
were all under the control of the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A., and were
attended by more than a thousand Christian students. At them all T dis-
cussed in the class-room and on the platform the general subject, "The Col-
lege Man and the Home Problems of the Church." I had the privilege of
visiting and speaking at Davidson, University of North Carolina, Th^ Agri-
cultural and Mechanical College of North Carolina, and Trinity College.
APPENDIX. 73
Young People and Missions. — June 24-26, 1904, at Winona Lake, Indiana;
July 1-10, 1904, at Lookout Mt., Tenn.; July 25-28, 1904, at Silver Bay, Lake
George, N. Y., I attended the three summer conferences of the Young People's
Missionary Movement, on whose Executive Committee I have served from the
beginning. At Lookout Mountain I conducted the Mission Study Class and
helped otherwise. Quite a number of strong young people from other
churches were present and received an impetus for better work at home.
The two conferences held here have given our Church thirteen volunteers for
the foreign field.
Many of the leaders of the Church life in the South throughout the Baptist,
Christian, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches are feeling more and more
the need of a great Southern Summer Conference and School of Methods, to
be located at some central point, easy of access, to do for the South what
Northfield and Winona Lake have done for the East and Middle West.
The celebration of Sabbath School Day by our schools, according to the
purposes and plan of the Assembly, has not become as general as we desire.
The programme prepared and sent free to all the schools have been far from
perfect. An effort has been made to use the talent available in our own
Church in the preparation of the music. This experiment was not altogether
satisfactory.
Sabbath School Day Collections. — For Sabbath School Missions:
In 1901 297 schools gave $ 1,400
In 1902 523 schools gave 3,800
In 1903 1,002 schools gave 6,335
In 1904 512 schools gave 3,937
Total in four years $15,472
The falling off of last year was probably due to several causes, the chief
two of which were the feeling on the part of many that the Publication Com-
mittee did not need the money, and the special effort in behalf of the Congo
boat, made just before our collection.
If the business department of the committee had not been able to sup-
plement the gifts of the churches and schools to the amount of $5,948, our
progress would have been seriously hindered.
We recommend the adoption of the following policy for the ensuing year:
1. The development of the District Work as rapidly as the funds in hand
permit.
2. Vigorous effort to organize Teacher Training Classes in every school.
3. Systematic effort to develop the missionary interest of the young through-
out the Sunday-school.
4. The universal celebration of Sabbath-School Day, first Sunday in October,
with large collections for Sabbath-School Missions.
5. Special effort to enlarge our schools by the organization of Cradle Rolls,
Home Departments, and Young Men and Young Women's Bible Classes
during the month of October, 1905; and special effort under the direc-
tion of the superintendents and pastors, in connection with each com-
munion season, 1906, to bring pupils to a saving knowledge of Jesus
Christ.
74
APPENDIX.
6. Assembly's plans for Young People's Societies again commended to the
churches.
7. The more effective organization of Synodical and Presbyterial Committees.
A. L. PHILLIPS,
General Superintendent.
Repokt of Treasueek of Executive Committee of Publication fob Yeab
Ending Mabch 31, 1905.
Cash Account.
Receipts.
Balance on hand April 1, 1904 $ 10,766 26
Union Bank, special deposit 4,000 00
Cash sale in Book Department 15,351 13
Cash sales in Periodical Department 13,086 48
Collections on current accounts 53,953 61
Old ledger accounts 1,333 34
From churches and Sabbath schools 13,232 98
Collections on notes due Committee 12,300 00
Rent of residence 788 42
Interest on money loaned 1,135 62
Traveling fund returned 117 10
Insurance rebate 22 11
Furniture 60 50
Covenanter dues 17 50
-$126,165 05
Disbursements.
Periodicals — Expense of department for printing, edito-
rial and clerical force, postage, etc $ 30,259 34
Books — Bought and printed 33,659 62
Sabbath-School Missions — Salaries and expense of
field workers, institutes, printing, etc 12,795 02
Salaries for Secretary and clerical force in business
department 8,775 13
Building Account — Final payment on new building 8,703 36
Accounts payable 7,079 25
Advertising 2,661 56
Postage 2,464 20
Freight and drayage 1,062 24
Travelling expenses 246 50
Insurance on stock 354 79
Furniture for new building 646 00
Funds returned and forwarded 143 23
Insurance, taxes, and repairs 712 20
Royalty on book sales 32 01
General expense — Extra help and moving 246 51
Printing and office stationery 444 99
Light 256 02
Fuel 174 15
APPENDIX. < O
Telephone 82 97
Electric Motor expense 83 50
Water tax 40 45
License 63 75
Auditor and surety bonds 112 50
Incidentals 261 33
Balance on hand March 31, 1905 14,786 43
$126,165 05
Balance Sheet March 31, 1905.
Assets. Liabilities.
Capital $101,919 52
Stock of books $ 27,270 55
Furniture 1,367 87
Stereotype plates 3,888 92
Accounts receivable 25,957 89
Old ledger accounts 1,606 13
Real estate 47,656 31
Cash balance 14,786 43
Accounts payable for March purchases 5,428 95
Profit and Loss — Undistributed profit 3,573 58
Periodical liability for unexpired subscriptions 11,312 05
Royalty liability on books sold 300 00
$122,534 10 $122,531 10
The undersigned, Auditing Committee, in conjunction with Mr. Addison
Maupin, accountant, having examined the account of R. E. Magill, Treasurer
of the Executive Committee of Publication, certify the same is correct.
Vouchers are in hand for all disbursements, and the balance on hand March
31, 1905, was $14,786.43. H. SWINEFORD,
B. C. WHERRY,
EDWIN PLEASANTS.
IV. ABSTRACT OF THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COM-
MITTEE OF FOREIGN MISSIONS.
As usual, the largest ingathering is that of our African Mission, which re-
ports the addition of 815 members on profession of faith. Our China missions
have been much cheered and encouraged by the new reinforcements which
they have received. A very important step which they have taken is the estab-
lishment, in co-operation with the Central China Mission of the Presbyterian
Church in the United States of America, of a Theological Seminary, in which
Rev. J. W. Davis, D. D., of our Mid-China Mission, has been selected as one
of the teachers. All of the missions are making strenuous efforts to de-
velop the native arm of the work, being convinced that the native agency,
properly trained and led, furnishes the most effective means for the propa-
gation of the Gospel. The situation created in Japan by the war with Russia
has given to our missionaries in that field great opportunities for winning
76
APPENDIX.
the good-will of the Japanese through ministrations of mercy to sick and
wounded soldiers returning from the front, and to the bereaved families and
friends of those who have fallen in battle. Direct evangelistic work has also
been vigorously carried on in barracks and in hospitals, and many have been
reached in this way and brought to the knowledge of the Saviour. Steps of
progress in the Southern Brazil Mission have been the establishment of an
industrial school for boys at Lavras, under the care of Rev. S. R. Gammon,
and the adoption of measures for the reopening of the work at Campinas,
under the care of Rev. Alva Hardie, who was assigned to that work at the
last meeting of the Southern Brazil Mission. Our missionaries in Brazil
report that the growth of the Independent Presbyterian Church has been
small, and that in only a few places has it interfered with the development
of churches remaining in connection with the Synod of Brazil. Our Mexican
Mission suffered an irreparable loss in the death of Rev. A. T. Graybill, but
Mr. Shelby writes that we have now in that field several very excellent native
ministers, and it is possible that these will be led to feel more strongly the
responsibility that is thrown upon them by the loss of Mr. Graybill. In our
African Mission the loss of the Lapsley reported last year is paralleled this
year by the destruction of our station at Ibanj by natives of the Bakuba
tribe, who were in revolt against the Congo Independent State. The prop-
erty loss is estimated at about $9,000, and the lives of the missionaries at
that station were saved with the greatest difficulty. At one time Luebo
Station was also threatened by hostile natives, but many of the villages in
the vicinity of Luebo declared their friendship for the mission and refused
to join the movement that had for its purpose the expulsion of all foreigners
from the district. At last accounts the country had become quiet again and
our missionaries had returned to Ibanj for the purpose of immediately re-
building the station and carrying on the work. Large use is being made in
this mission of native evangelists, who are carefully taught and then sent out
to tell the Gospel story in places where the missionaries cannot go as yet.
The hindrance to our work which we have suffered on account of the inability
to purchase land upon which to establish new mission stations will, in some
measure, be removed by the more extensive adoption of this method of carry-
ing on the work. Native evangelists can be stationed anywhere permanently,
and the missionaries can visit them and remain as long as fifteen days at a
time at places where we have no regular stations. In this way by frequent
visitations the work can be kept well in hand by the missionaries.
Twenty-six new missionaries were sent out during the year. The largest
number sent in any previous year was twenty-one, in the year 1903-'04. The
number of missionaries now on our roll, including those under appointment,
but not yet sent out, is 198. There has been a manifest increase of foreign
missionary interest in our seminaries during the past two years, and many of
the best men in each of the five theological institutions of our Church are
seriously considering the question of a call to the foreign field.
The total receipts for the year were $226,284.25. This is $10,244.47 less
than the receipts for the previous year. Of the total receipts, $6,280.43 were
from legacies. Receipts from legacies the previous year were $7,801.33.
There was also an individual donation of $25,000 last year, to which there
was no corresponding gift this year. An advance payment was made to the
APPENDIX. I i
missions on the first quarter of the new fiscal year of $14,745.01. The cash
balance in the treasury at the end of the year was $13,975.68. The total dis-
bursements for the work were $212,423.26. The amount required for the outfit
and travel of the large number of new missionaries sent out, and the duplica-
tion of orders by our African Mission on account of the loss of the Lapsley
and the destruction of Ibanj Station, largely increased our expenditures over
what they would have been under normal conditions. It may be noted that
the receipts for the month of March were $45,652.28, the largest amount ever
received in one month in the history of our work.
The response to our appeal for funds to rebuild the Samuel N. Lapsley has
been most gratifying. The enthusiasm aroused in behalf of this fund was
so great that there was diverted to it from the general fund not only a very
large proportion of the contributions of our Sunday schools and Young
People's Societies, but also a considerable amount of the regular contributions
of the churches. Some embarrassment to our treasury has arisen from this
cause, which we believe, however, to be only temporary. During the year
$28,582.08 were received for this fund. The amount received during the
previous year was $9,647.37. The total amount of the fund at present is
$38,229.45. Occasional contributions are still coming in, but we regard the
collection of the fund as practically completed. Rev. T. Hope Morgan, of the
English Baptist Mission, who has kindly acted as our business agent at
Leopoldville, reports in his last letter that he had been unable so far to make
any sale of the wrecked Lapsley, and that the prospect of realizing anything
from that source seemed remote.
It is estimated that about one-half the fund will be required for the build-
ing of the steamer. About the same amount will be required for its trans-
port and reconstruction in Africa. The amount required for this latter
purpose will not probably have to be paid out during the present fiscal year.
Mr. Vass was instructed by the committee, at its meeting on March 7th, to
proceed to England for the purpose of conferring with the firm of Graham,
Ritchie & Milne, with reference to their bid for building the steamer, which
was £3,870, and also of obtaining bids from other British firms, if possible,
and of having the work of construction begun at the earliest possible date.
The lowest bid from any responsible American firm was a bid of $34,100.
The work of the Forward Movement has been prosecuted as vigorously as
was possible under the circumstances. Rev. J. L. Stuart, Jr., and Rev. L. I.
Moffett gave each about five months to the prosecution of this work before
sailing for their field of labor in China. Earnest efforts have been made to
use our Presbyterian Committees and chairmen of Foreign Missions in the
prosecution of the work. A considerable number of churches not strong
enough to assume the full support of missionaries, but strong enough to take
one or more shares in some of our stations, have been reached through this
channel.
The Co-ordinate Secretary having chief charge of the foreign mission work
in the field, elected by the General Assembly, declined the election, and the
commission appointed by the Assembly was unable to fill his place until the
9th of January, 1905, when the Rev. James O. Reavis, of Dallas, Texas,
elected by the commission, and accepting the work, entered upon the duties
of his office.
78
APPENDIX.
The committee desires to place on record its enthusiastic endorsement of
this action of the commission, and its profound gratification at this addition
to our working force. Since entering on the work, Mr. Reavis has visited
all our Theological Seminaries except Columbia, which was visited by the
chairman of the committee, and a number of our denominational schools;
and has visited churches in all our Synods, except that of Florida, giving
special attention to the work of the Forward Movement in all these visits.
The churches show their appreciation of the additional secretary by re-
quests for service at his hands far greater than he is able to render. A most
encouraging feature of his work, so far, has been the enlistment of a number
of individuals in the support of missionaries.
At its July meeting the Executive Committee assigned to the Literature
Department, in addition to the general editorial work on the missionary
publications, the special work of the Women's Missionary Societies and the
Mission Study Course.
The principal publications of the year have been the two missionary maga-
zines, the Year Book of Prayer, the literature used in the Congo Boat can-
vass, which included the Children's Day Exercise, Forward Movement and
other leaflets, Mission Study books and pamphlets.
The Missionary has increased in circulation by a net gain of 978 subscrib-
ers, and it has also grown in favor throughout the Church. It is gratifying
to your committee to report that the magazine, as in two previous years, has
again paid the expense of its publication. The expense of publication for
the year has been $5,810.40. The subscription and cash advertising receipts
have been $6,091.89.
The Children's Missionary has a circulation of 6,000 copies, showing a small
decrease in the past year. There has been a net increase of paid subscribers;
the decrease in the total being accounted for by the discontinuance of a very
considerable number of names of unpaid subscribers dropped in the careful
revision of the mail list.
An edition of 6,000 copies of the Year Book of Prayer was issued, and more
than enough copies have already been sold to pay the entire expense of its
publication.
An edition of 80,000 copies of Children's Day Exercises, a larger number
than was issued in any previous year, proved insufficient to meet the de-
mand. These exercises, together with 135,000 mite boxes, and more than
100,000 circulars, were sent out and used in connection with the Congo Boat
appeal.
No feature of the Literature Department has had such large development
as that of the Mission Study Course. A careful system of conducting the
classes includes their enrollment and receipt of regular reports in the
editorial office. Three classes were reported in 1903, 83 in 1904, and this
year we have a total of 231 classes. Over 2,000 text-books and numerous
libraries have been supplied to senior classes. Not the least hopeful part of
this movement has been the large number of Junior Study Classes organized.
For these classes an edition of 2,000 copies of a special text-book, "China for
Juniors, ' was issued, and nearly all have been sold. This extensive work
has been done without extra draft upon the treasury of the Executive Com-
mittee, the profits on the publications having been sufficient to meet inci-
dental expenses.
APPENDIX. 79
The subject of the relation of the missionaries to churches in mission
lands and to the Presbyteries in those lands, was referred by the last Assem-
bly to the Executive Committee of Foreign Missions to report to this Assem-
bly. This action was taken in connection with the adoption of the recom-
mendation of the Ad-Interim Committee on the Memorial of the Korean
Mission.
The report of the Ad-Interim Committee, which was adopted by the As-
sembly, declined to approve the organization of a Presbytery either in Korea
or in China, to which the foreign evangelist should have the relation asked
in the memorial. Action to the same effect was taken by the Assembly
which met at Jackson, Miss., in 1902. We find also that the Assembly in
1887 answered an overture from East Hanover Prebytery in regard to the
Presbyterial relations of foreign missionaries, that "No minister can consti-
tutionally be at the same time a member of two Presbyteries; hence the
transfer (of a missionary) to a foreign Presbytery involves the complete
severance of previously existing Presbyterial relations, precisely as at home."
It is competent, of course, for this Assembly to reconsider and take action
contrary to these deliverances of former Assemblies. Whether such action
can be taken consistently with the principles of our Presbyterian polity is an
ecclesiastical question which the Assembly alone can decide.
As a question of mission policy the Executive Committee is not prepared
of its own judgment to recommend such action. The committee, however,
recognizes the force of the fact that this policy is the one recommended to us
unanimously, with one exception, by our mission in Korea, and agreed upon
as best by all the Presbyterian missions working in that field. It is also the
policy indorsed as best and wisest for the Presbyterian Church in China by
a large majority of the Presbyterian missionaries in that field. To the ques-
tion asked by our Korean Mission, "Should not great weight be given to the
opinion of the brethren who have grown up with the Church and know the
conditions as no one else can?" we answer, unhesitatingly, yes. In view of
this almost unanimous sentiment of the Korea and China Missions, the com-
mittee would feel constrained to waive its own judgment as to the general
ecclesiastical policy to be pursued and acquiesce in the view of the two mis-
sions as a provisional arrangement.
Should the Assembly, however, decide that the request of the two missions
cannot be granted because of the inconsistency of the proposed plan with the
principles of our Presbyterian polity, then the Executive Committee would
recommend the following solution of the question at issue:
1. That the Assembly express its approval of the expressed desire on the
part of our missions in Korea and China to co-operate with other Presbyterian
missions in the organization of one United Presbyterian Church in each of
those fields.
2. That the Assembly authorize its missionaries to take all such steps as
may be necessary, and as may be in conformity with Presbyterian principles,
"to complete the formation and to secure the independence of the proposed
United Presbyterian Churches in Korea and China." (See Minutes of Mid-
China Mission, page 242.)
3. For an authoritative definition of the rights and powers of the foreign
evangelist, with reference to the organization of churches in mission lands,
80
APPENDIX.
the missionaries are referred to the action of the Assembly of 1881, adopting
the report of an Ad-Interim Committee, of which Dr. B. M. Palmer was chair-
man, and Drs. James Woodrow, Stuart Robinson, J. A. Lefevre, J. Leighton
Wilson, T. E. Peck, and J. B. Alger were members.
An attempt to secure additional legislation on this subject in 1894 in the
way of amendment to the Form of Government was defeated by the vote of
the Presbyteries.
To this action of the Assembly of 1881 it is recommended that the present
Assembly add an expression of its judgment that when there are two or more
foreign evangelists working in the same field the powers described in the
above paragraph should, as a matter of ecclesiastical propriety, be exercised
by them jointly, provided they are not so far apart geographically as to
make such co-operation impracticable.
When a sufficient number of native churches have been organized and a
sufficient number of native ministers and elders ordained, with such geo-
graphical relations to each other as would make the organization of a Pres-
bytery practicable, your committee recommends that our missionaries be in-
structed to use their influence to have such Presbytery organized on the basis
of autonomy and independence of all foreign churches. When so organized
the relation to be sustained to said Presbytery by foreign missionaries work-
ing within its bounds is a matter to be determined, first, by the native Pres-
bytery, in the exercise of its autonomous power, and then by the churches
whose representatives the missionaries are, in the exercise of their general
powers of supervision and direction of the missionaries under their care.
In view of the above consideration, the Executive Committee deems it un-
necessary at present to propose any new legislation to be enacted defining the
relation of the missionaries to churches in mission lands and to the Presby-
teries in those lands. The committee considers that the provisions of our
Manual of Foreign Missions, as expressed in paragraphs 14 and 15, taken with
the above suggestions, are sufficient to meet the present requirements of the
case.
There is urgent need in all our missions of more and better facilities for
the training of native helpers. Fifty thousand dollars could be easily and
economically expended in our various fields this year for buildings and equip-
ment of schools for this purpose. Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars is
the minimum needed this year to properly maintain our work on its present
basis, and to make any advance towards the fuller and more effective occu-
pation of the fields assigned to us will require an income of not less than
$275,000.
V. ABSTRACT OF THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COM-
MITTEE OF COLORED EVANGELIZATION.
The past year has been one of progress, and some solid results have been
achieved. The gifts of the people have increased nearly twenty per cent., and
a goodly sum has been invested in the permanent improvements of our
schools and in the building of churches.
In reviewing the work of the Southern Presbyterian Church for the better-
APPENDIX. OL
ment of the colored people, one must be impressed with its steady growth and
substantial improvement year by year. The results may appear to some to
be disproportionate to the labor and money expended. We would remind
such persons that the results of missionary efforts often make very little
show in statistics, and the satisfaction of having obeyed the Lord is some-
times our only immediate reward. To say, however, that we have trained
less than one hundred preachers, and built only fifty churches, and gathered
less than three thousand communicants, is to overlook the more important
features of colored evangelization. For, undoubtedly, this effort in behalf of
the African here had much to do with the beginning of our mission on the
Kaissai, in the Congo Free State. Four of our colored preachers, Sheppard,
Hawkins, DeYampert and Edmiston, are doing faithful work in that dan-
gerous and difficult field, and it is not unlikely that this remarkable mission
would necessarily have been abandoned had not these men, trained in our
own school, been available. Then, again, the policy and methods of our
Church in dealing with this question have had wide influence in shaping
Christian sentiment upon a grave question, which is not only religious, but
patriotic. We are sure, too, that a blessing has come to our own people by
cultivating a spirit of patience and Christian forbearance toward the negro.
The property of Stillman Institute consists of forty-eight acres of fine land,
two large school buildings, and one eight-room residence — the latter being
occupied by the assistant superintendent. Twenty-eight acres of this land
were purchased last year for $2,250. Of this amount $750 has been paid,
leaving $1,500 to be paid in three annual instalments, with 5 per cent, interest.
The past session has been fairly successful, but the faculty has been
hampered by the loss of Dr. L. J. Coppedge, who resigned last June, and no
one as yet has been found to take his place.
The enrollment has been sixty-two, and no effort was made to increase the
number, as both our teaching force and the boarding accommodations were
limited. Twenty-one are candidates for the ministry, and seven are ordained
ministers. Twelve are candidates for the Presbyterian ministry, and form
an exceptionally promising class.
The industrial feature has continued in force, at least in so far as is re-
quired by the farming operations, and the performance of all labor in and
about the buildings and grounds, cooking, caring for the stock, etc. Each
student is required to work three hours each day and six hours on Saturday,
and this labor is expected to pay his board. Among the products of the
farm this year were five bales of cotton, six tons of hay, and several hun-
dred bushels of corn, besides large quantities of vegetables.
This feature of your theological school has attracted the interest of many
friends of the negro, and has received much commendation. Rev. G. S. Dick-
erman, D. D., Field Agent of the Southern Education Board, has recently
visited the Institute for the purpose of inspecting this and other features. He
attaches much importance and significance to this wise effort to combine
healthy exercise, manual training, self-support, and strong religious teaching.
The expense of conducting the Stillman Institute for the past year has been
$3,346.92. This does not include the salary of the teacher, amounting to
$812.50. This we regard as a sum inadequate to the proper support of the
school, and we fear that economy has been carried to the point of inefficiency.
F
82
APPENDIX.
We are convinced that the Institute is the central feature of our work for
the uplift of the negro. Failure here means failure all along the line. The
evangelistic work is entirely dependent upon the ability and character of the
graduates. Another professor should be provided for, whose special work, in
addition to teaching, should be the personal development of the religious
character of the students. To enforce this need, allow us to call your atten-
tion to the experience of other schools where the industrial system prevails.
It has been found that a fair ratio of instructors to pupils is one to fifteen.
In the large school at Tuskegee, Ala., it is one to ten. At Stillman it is one
to thirty.
We continue to seek for men among the students who have the character
and ability to jnake successful missionaries in Africa. One of the recent
graduates has been lately added to the force at Luebo, and there are three
others at the Institute who are being trained for that work. The needs for
equipment at the Institute are not large. There should be built a cottage for
an additional teacher, and a small barn is needed to house our increasing
crops. Probably both could be built for $1,200.
The Ferguson-Williams College, at Abbeville, S. C, under the efficient man-
agement of Rev. E. W. Williams and wife, has had an enrollment of 250,
taxing to the utmost the capacity of the building, and proving a heavy
financial burden to the principal. We have been able to send him only a
small appropriation, amounting to $240 for the entire year. Repairs upon
the building were made to the amount of $200. We regret to say that a re-
cent appeal made by the local trustees and this committee met with little
response.
The parochial schools, taught by several of the colored ministers in con-
nection with their church work, have generally been well attended; indeed,
their success has been their undoing in several instances. Rev. E. W. Ben-
jamin, at Vicksburg, reports an enrollment of 200, and states that he is no
longer able to provide teachers out of the small fees, and he, therefore, pro-
poses to give over his useful work. Rev. J. S. Morrow has taught at North
Wilkesboro, attendance thirty. Rev. I. C. H. Champney, at Montgomery, en-
rollment sixty. Rev. E. M. Gilliard, at Tuscaloosa, enrollment forty. Rev.
A. M. Plant, at Texarkana, has raised about $700 and purchased twenty acres
of land, and expects to establish an industrial school.
During the past year we have had forty-three ministers regularly at work,
supplying more than 150 churches. Of these, twenty-three have received some
help from this committee, in sums varying from $5 to $20 per month, only
two receiving the maximum amount. Two new church buildings have been
erected. The number of accessions upon profession of faith is 227. The
number of children in Sunday school is 2,335. The total membership report-
ed is 2,507, and the total amount contributed is $3,909. It is to be remem-
bered that many of the Stillman students are doing good work in the Metho-
dist and Baptist churches.
The growth of Presbyterianism among the negroes is extremely slow and
difficult, but those who have been well grounded in the faith hold on with
remarkable zeal and faith.
The evangelistic department of our work is the most difficult to admin-
ister, and is the least satisfactory in its progress. There is, first of all, the
APPENDIX. 83
scarcity of true and tried men to whom we may intrust the care of the
colored churches. The anxiety we have felt to extend our operations widely,
and the pressure upon the committee to occupy promising fields, has induced
us to take up men from other churches, and to put forward some of our
own of whom we were more hopeful than certain. Some have proved un-
worthy and some inefficient. As soon as the committee discovers such un-
faithfulness the men are cut off, but great harm is often done, and many
good people become discouraged.
In this connection we express the opinion that a close supervision of the
field-work should be maintained. Ordinarily this duty would be performed
by the Secretary, but in the present straightened condition of the work, his
time is largely occupied with teaching and the administration of Stillman
Institute. We suggest, therefore, that the Assembly request Presbyterial
chairmen and pastors to exercise a friendly oversight of the colored min-
isters and churches within their respective bounds, and to report upon them
to the Secretary of Colored Evangelization. We take pleasure in commend-
ing the fidelity and loyalty of our colored preachers and congregations to the
Southern Presbyterian Church. They receive at our hands far less financial
assistance than they might get by seeking some other ecclesiastical con-
nection.
We still regard these Sunday schools as a most efficient and practical
agency for the uplift of the colored people. It is a matter of common re-
mark that the younger generation of negroes is more neglected than any that
has preceded them. Parental authority exerted for proper ends is almost
unknown. The Sunday schools of their own churches are rarely efficient,
and are not generally attended. While the importance and possibility of
reaching these neglected children by the establishment of Sunday schools is
acknowledged, it is becoming more difficult to find teachers and superin-
tendents for them. The arduous nature of the work, the apparent paucity of
results, the indifference of the whites, and the jealousy of the colored pastors
are some of the reasons given for the failure to persevere in this noble effort.
Few new schools are reported, and in some localities the work has been given
up. The following schools have been reported, with their attendance: Louis-
ville, Ky. (two schools), 300, with an additional 100 attending industrial
classes on week nights; Lexington, Ky. (two schools), 145; Atlanta, Ga., 170;
Thomasville, Ga., 60; Tuscaloosa, Ala., 65; Ways, Ga., 25; Oxford, Miss., 40;
Birmingham, Ala., 80; Memphis, Tenn., 12.
The report of the Treasurer, Dr. John Little, shows that the gifts during
the year ending March 31, 1905, have amounted to $10,699.45, being an in-
crease over last year of $2,086.56. There was a balance in the treasury on
April 1, 1905, of $2,679.13. In addition to the amount received and disbursed
through your Committee of Colored Evangelization, it should be remembered
that some churches and Presbyteries give directly to local agencies. The
amount thus given is not far from $3,000; so that the entire gifts to this
cause last year by our Church amounted to about $13,694.
In order that your Executive Committee may be placed in more personal
and intimate relation to the work, especially as centered at Stillman Institute,
we suggest that their headquarters be changed from Birmingham to Tusca-
loosa, Ala.
84
APPENDIX.
VI. ABSTRACT OF THE ANNUAL REPORT OP THE EXECUTIVE COM-
MITTEE OF MINISTERIAL EDUCATION AND RELIEF.
In obedience to the command of the last Assembly, in session at Mobile,
the work of the Executive Committee of Education for the Ministry, located
at Memphis, Tenn., and the work of the Executive Committee on Ministerial
Relief, located at Richmond, Va., were transferred to the Consolidated Com-
mittee, known as the Committee of Ministerial Education and Relief, on
September 1, 1904.
The committee has been incorporated under the laws of the Commonwealth
of Kentucky. The official title is the Executive Committee of Ministerial
Education and Relief of the Presbyterian Church in the United States.
While the cost of moving the offices and equipping the new quarters has
added considerable to the expense of the year, in many ways we have been
able to reduce the annual expenditures and yet keep up vigorous and aggres-
sive work.
The Secretary has visited many of the academies, colleges and universities
of the South to present the claims of the ministry to the students. On
almost every trip he has arranged to present the cause of Ministerial Relief
to some of the stronger churches.
As directed by the last Assembly, we have endeavored to raise for Minis-
terial Education this year $30,000.00 by apportioning this sum to the Pres-
byteries and urging each to raise its share. The Treasurer's report shows we
received $19,991.79, as against $21,409.83 last year. At this date $15,206.83
has been remitted to candidates, and $2,648.17 more will be remitted before
the close of the session. We have on our roll 190 beneficiaries, one more 'nan
last year. These are under the care of sixty-six Presbyteries. Of this num-
ber 148 are receiving the maximum appropriation, which has been raised
from $90.00 to $100.00. The others, 42 in number, are receiving amounts
ranging from $30.00 to $90.00. Of the beneficiaries enrolled, 93 are theologi-
cal and 97 are collegiate students.
We have on file in our office the names, address and other information of
311 candidates who are now under the care of the various Presbyteries. We
have the same information concerning 51 of the young men of our Church
who have definitely decided to give their lives to the work of the ministry-
Hundreds of tracts have been mailed from the office to men whose names
were furnished by pastors and friends.
It is gratifying to report a good degree of progress in the work of Minis-
terial Relief during the year.
An increase of more than $2,000.00 was made in the amounts appropriated
this year. This did not in any way meet the full necessities of the bene-
ficiaries, nor fulfill the obligations which the Church owes to her faithful
and enfeebled veterans and to the widows and orphans of those who have
been promoted to a higher service. But it is gratifying to see that the
Church is awakening to her responsibility.
We have on our roll 42 ministers whose average age is 72 years, and
whose average term of service to our Church is 37 years; 108 widows whose
average age is 53, and whose husbands gave an average of 28 years to the
building of the Zion of our God ; 14 orphans, whose fathers and mothers have
APPENDIX. 85
been called to their reward and who are not able to support themselves.
There are dependent upon these, in whole or in part, 101 children over the
age of 14 years, and 69 little fatherless children under 14 years of age.
During the year $22,501.59 have been received to the credit of the Annual
Fund, an increase of $2,698.22 over the credits of the preceding year. The
beneficiaries have been paid $18,364.75, as against $15,967.36 last year — an
increase of $2,397.39.
The Endowment Fund of Ministerial Relief, the youngest for any Church in
the land, has received some slight additions during the year. One legacy
of $500.00 has been received, and $2,845.44 has been added through contribu-
tions from churches, Sabbath schools and societies. The entire amount in
the Endowment Fund is now $25,325.84.
The Ministerial Relief Edition, kindly published by our Church papers,
issued January 26th, and 10,000 circulars issued later in the year, resulted in
added contributions to this fund, and the effects of this labor is still being
felt.
Already plans have been laid to follow up this special effort by personal
visitation to men of means in our Church, with the hope of securing larger
donations to this business-like enterprise upon which we have entered.
Your committee is endeavoring in every way to secure the co-operation of
every pastor, officer and member in this forward movement. Last year the
Richmond committee received $5,795.57 from churches and individuals;
$7,530.16 from legacies and $441.51 from interest on funds. This year, at the
suggestion of some of the larger contributors, the committee decided to place
all the interest on invested funds to the credit of the Annual Fund.
We recommend the following form of bequest: "I devise and bequeath to
the Executive Committee of Ministerial Education and Relief of the Presby-
terian Church in the United States, the sum of $ for the En-
dowment Fund of Ministerial Relief."
Repoet of Treasurers.
Report of G. W. Macrae, Treasurer of Education, from April 1, 1904, to
September 1, 1904:
Dr.
April 4, 1904.— Balance on hand $7,915 72
Received since 7,108 43
$15,024 15
Cr.
Remitted students $289 33
Salary secretary 750 00
Salary treasurer 62 50
Travelling expenses secretary 25 60
Printing, postage and stationery 73 17
$ 1,200 60
Balance on hand $13,823 55
Report of I. S. McElroy, treasurer of Ministerial Relief, from April 1, 1904,
to September 1, 1904.
86
APPENDIX.
DB.
Received from churches, Sabbath schools, societies and
individuals $9,333 08
Returned checks 45 00
Cr.
Beneficiaries, first quarter $4,215 00
Salaries 1,176 65
Printing and stationery 322 35
Postage and express 173 72
Office rent and supplies 148 70
Travelling expenses 101 50
Miscellaneous 153 62
Balance 3,086 54
Endowment Fund.
Balance on hand $21,399 23
Received from churches, Sabbath schools, societies and
individuals 582 17
$ 9,378 08
$ 9,378 08
$21,981 40
Transferred to Louisville Committee.
Bonds $ 9,750 00
Cash 12,231 40
$21,981 40
Report of John Stites, Treasurer of Ministerial Education and Relief.
Education.
Dr.
Received September 1, 1904, from G. W. Macrae, Treas-
urer of the former committee $13,823 55
Received from churches, Sunday schools, societies and
individuals from Sept. 1, 1904, to April 1, 1905 12,900 44
$26,723 99
Cr.
Remitted to students $14,917 50
Checks returned 26 63
Salaries 965 03
General expenses and office rent 305 29
Printing, postage and travelling expenses 430 91
Cash balance April 1, 1905 10,078 63
$26,723 99
Ministerial Relief.
Dr.
Received from Rev. I. S. McElroy, former treasurer. . . .$ 3,086 54
Received from all sources during the year from Septem-
ber 1, 1904, to April 1, 1905, including interest on
investments 13,115 09
$16,201 63
APPENDIX.
CB.
Remitted beneficiaries $14,149 75
General expense and office rent 360 23
Printing, postage and travelling expenses 344 78
Salaries 965 01
Paid accrued interest on bonds purchased for Endow-
ment Fund 156 64
Checks returned 131 37
Cash balance April 1, 1905 93 85
87
$16,201 63
Endowment Fund.
Dr.
Received from Richmond Committee:
Cash $ 8,656 40
Notes 9,750 00
Sutton legacy 3,575 00
Subscriptions from all sources from September 1, 1904,
to April 1, 1905 3,345 44
Cr.
Invested in:
Notes (received from Richmond Committee).. ..$ 9,750 00
Bonds 13,076 20
Preferred stock 1,820 00
Uninvested cash on hand April 1, 1905 6S0 64
$25,326 84
$25,326 S4
Total receipts for all causes $68,251 46
Total disbursements all causes:
Ministerial Education $16,645 36
Ministerial Relief 16,107 78
Cash on hand 10,852 12
Investments • 24,646 20
$6S,251 46
VII. ABSTRACT OF THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE ASSEMBLY'S HOME
AND SCHOOL.
Without doubt, we consider the past year the best in the history of the
institution. Interest and sympathy in the work has increased, and its nature
is being better understood. Whilst the contributions are not yet what they
should be, there has been a decided improvement during the past yea'', a
providential fact when we remember the advance in the cost of living.
We have met promptly all current expenses, and have paid $465 on the
debt, leaving a balance of $2,250 on the $6,000 debt apportioned to the Pres-
byteries. Many of the Presbyteries have paid in full, some in part, and some
have paid nothing. Enough is unpaid to liquidate the balance on the debt.
It would be a blessing to the institution if these Presbyteries would devise
means to pay the amounts apportioned them without forcing us to disturb
88
APPENDIX.
our bequest fund. We have been greatly encouraged by receiving during the
past year two bequests for the Home and School, one from Mrs. Mary A.
Titcomb, of Columbia, Tenn., and one from Mr. R. M. Scruggs, of St. Louis,
the former leaving $1,000, and the latter $5,000. We believe that others will
follow the example of these Christian friends. We need buildings, a boy's
home, and also some cottages for widows with families would be a help to
the work and a blessing to the widows.
Although we do not render assistance directly to the widows, and as a rule
only to children who are eligible to school, yet, when mothers come here to
be with their children, instead of boarding their children in the Home
proper, we board them with their mothers. This is a great assistance to
the mothers, and does not increase the expense of maintenance. In addition
to the fifty children (some of whom are in the Home proper and some with
their mothers), there are eight children (not eligible to school), and fifteen
widows who are indirectily benefited, making a total of seventy-three who
are directly and indirectly associated with the institution.
J. W. ROSBBRO, President.
Treasurer's Report.
As Treasurer of the corporation, I submit the following report:
I. — Receipts.
1. Balance in bank April 1, 1904 $ 2,826 03
2. From special collection in December 4,908 54
3. From scholarships, individuals and churches not included in the
December collection 2,809 78
4. Amount raised for the debt 465 00
5. From rent 150 00
$11,159 35
II. — Expenditures.
1. Interest $ 135 00
2. Insurance 30 40
3. Travelling expenses 122 95
4. Printing and distributing envelopes for December collection 135 41
5. Amount paid on debt 465 00
6. Salaries in the Home 1.435 00
7. Expenses of running Home and School, including tuition in Col-
lege and Elementary School 5,918 44
8. Balance in bank April 1, 1905 2,917 15
$11,159 35
III. — Real and Personal Estate.
1. Smithsonia Building $ 7.000 00
2. Gammon Cottage 1.500 00
3. Denny Cottage 1.500 00
4. Legacy Mrs. Mary A. Titcomb, $1,000, less 5 per cent, tax 950 00
5. Legacy Mr. R. M. Scruggs 5,000 00
6. Furniture 20 ° °°
$16,150 00
APPENDIX.
89
IV. — Outstanding Obligations.
1. Due A. W. Wallace, on Denny Cottage $1,000 00
2. Due C. D. Goodwin, on Gammon Cottage 1,250 00
$2,250 00
You will note there is a balance in bank to our credit of $2,917.15. Please
bear in mind that this is a part of our December collection, and must serve
for current expenses till January 1, 1906, and will be insufficient to carry us
to that date. S. W. SOMERVILLE, Treasurer.
VIII. NARRATIVE ON THE STATE OF RELIGION.
Your Committee on the Narrative would report that eighty of your eighty-
two Presbyteries have sent reports. Why two have failed to report is not
known to us.
While the complaint may again be made that many of these reports are
indefinite and incomplete, still we find in them much that calls for thank-
fulness to the Great Head of the Church for His goodness to us during the
past year.
Most of the Presbyteries report that in the great majority of our churches
the attendance upon the services of the sanctuary has been "good," "gratify-
ing," "excellent." In very few is there complaint of neglecting to assemble
themselves together, as the manner of some is, for the morning service. Yet,
with sorrow is the confession made of great lack of interest in and attend-
ance upon the evening service.
It is gratifying to know the unanimity of the statements as to the ob-
servance of the Lord's Day by our members, though many call attention to
growing tendency to travel on the Sabbath, to read the Sunday papers, and
to use the day for pleasure, thus departing from the customs of our fathers,
to our spiritual loss.
There is unquestionably a great improvement in the efficiency and training
in our Sabbath schools. The Assembly may well rejoice in the great re-
vival of interest in this work, and the developing of improved methods of
training our children. We believe there has never been a time when our
Sabbath schools were as well equipped in officers and teachers and all the
necessary aids and appliances, and the results of the year's work are very
cheering. God's people are reported as faithfully worshipping God with
their substance, and as one evidence of this pastors are paid promptly and
in full. Few of them are left under the burden of worldly cares on account
of the failure of the churches to meet their pledges, as the amounts still due
are very small.
There is cause for thankfulness also that in the midst of growing worldly
conformity, which has well-nigh obliterated the lines of division between the
Church and the world, comparatively few of our members have been swept
into this stream and drifted away from the simplicity of Christian living.
Many cheering evidences of spiritual life and growth are given. Under a
sense of their need and sorrow for spiritual coldness many churches were led
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APPENDIX.
in humiliation to pray for renewed life. In a number of cities united special
services were held, and from many comes glad news of Pentecostal blessings,
under which many of the saved were added to the Church.
Aggressive work is pushed with much success. Our Presbyteries are in-
creasingly realizing the value of evangelistic work, and a great number of
our churches are abundant in labors for destitutions about them. All honor
to those who are helping mission work in our cities, and are not forgetting
the weak country fields. All honor to those who in the midst of many di:Il-
culties and discouragements are trying to do something for the colored people
in their reach.
There is also cause for thankfulness, though the doleful cry of vacant
churches still oppresses our hearts, that our destitutions are not so great,
and a slowly increasing number are offering themselves for the ministry.
Our need has led to more prayer for laborers, and in answer to God's call,
more of our sons are answering, "Here am I, send me." These are the
grounds for encouragement and thankfulness we gather from the reports.
We now turn to two matters that must fill our hearts with apprehension
and sorrow. They are not new matters. The first is the almost universal
report of the great neglect of family worship. Lack of time in this busy age,
the timidity of fathers, and such reasons, are given for this neglect. One
glory of the Presbyterian Church has been the holy influences that gather
around the family altar. From scenes like these old Scotia's glory sprang.
Shall we lose one of our distinctive traits? Alas! are we not fast losing it
by fathers ignoring their position as priests in their homes and suffering the
fire on the family altar to die out?
As is to be expected from this neglect, there inevitably follows the lack of
home training in the Scriptures and the Catechism. What imperishable
treasures are parents giving to their children when they teach them the
incomparable answers of our Catechism, the glorious hymns of the Church
and the Word of God! How rich their reward for self-denial and fidelity.
What cause for apprehension as to the future of our beloved Zion v. hen
family worship and parental training in the Scriptures is thus neglected.
Stalwart men and women, on whom rests the beauty of the Lord our God,
can only be obtained by these heaven appointed means. "For He established
a testimony in Jacob, and appoinred a law in Israel, which He commanded
our fathers that they should make them known to their children." For
their failure God's judgments fell on them, and these are an example to us.
The Assembly would again press on the hearts of our people, through the
Presbyteries, the vital importance of family worship and parental training
of our children in the Scriptures. J. W. ROSEBRO, Chairman.
IX. REPORT OF THE PERMANENT COMMITTEE ON THE BIBLE
CAUSE.
In presenting this our second annual report, we would respectfully lay
before the General Assembly as worthy of its careful consideration, some
important facts touching the work of Bible distribution in this and other
lands as developed during the last year. Our purpose has been to regard the
APPENDIX. 91
work in its broadest aspects, and present it in its widest bearings, in order
that we may bring it in its true character and conditions before your vener-
able court, and evoke for it the attention which it deserves.
Accordingly we lay before the Assembly:
1. The growing importance of this work.
There has never been a time since our ascending Lord gave His great com-
mission to the Church, "Go ye therefore and make disciples of all na-
tions, * * * teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have com-
manded you," when it was not of transcendent importance to have the reve-
lation of divine truth as contained in the sacred Scriptures in the hands of
all the people. The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century, when the followers
of Christ broke away from the domination of Pope and priest, and turned
directly to the oracles of God for the knowledge of salvation, and emanci-
pating the Bible from the chains by which it had long been bound, began to
circulate it freely among the people in the living languages of earth,
emphasized the importance of the work, and stamped it as fundamental in
Protestantism. And the organization of Bible societies a century ago brought
into yet greater prominence the necessity and value of this work. But the
condition of the world to-day makes it of still greater significance and im-
portance than ever before. The rapidly increasing education and intelligence
of the common people, rendering them capable of reading, and calling for
literature, opens the way for the larger use of the Bible in their hands.
The multiplication of books through the printing press makes it the more
important that the "Book of Books" should have a place in all literature.
The marked advance of our Western civilization, which furnishes a dangerous
power, if not essentially Christianized, requires in its march the dissemina-
tion of God's Word, from which it has drawn its inspiration and its prin-
ciples. And above all, the wonderful progress of Christian missions, which
characterizes the history of all Church work at the present time, magnifies
the importance of Bible distribution, since the printed word in the languages
of the people must go along with the ministrations of the missionary in order
to make them duly effective and permanent.
For these reasons, no branch of the Christian Church which is alive and
awake to the issues of the present time can fail to recognize the supreme
necessity, and to appreciate the great and growing importance of circulating
diligently and extensively the volume of saving truth.
2. The loud call which comes to us for the vigorous prosecution of this
important work.
The appeal in a vision of the night to Paul at Troas, of the man of Mace-
donia, the Apostle's prompt response to which carried the Gospel of salvation
to our forefathers in Europe, was hardly more distinct and emphatic than
that which comes to us to-day to disseminate the Bible among the ignorant
and benighted peoples of earth. As often observed of late, the world lies
open to the entrance of God's Word, even some lands where the personal
missionary could not go; the Lord has prepared and inclined the people
almost everywhere to receive and examine for themselves His Book of sacred
truth; and we have an agency organized for this very work, and well equipped
and qualified to do it economically, efficiently and successfully. All this
surely means a call, loud and clear, to us to whom the Lord has entrusted
92
APPENDIX.
His Word for the enlightenment and salvation of mankind, to lay off and
diligently prosecute the work.
And this call is emphasized in divine providence at the present time by
the peculiar conditions that confront us. Our own country, with its mar-
vellous growth and the insatiable thirst of our people for reading, is still
calling with unabated cry for the Bible; and the millions of immigrants
flocking to our shores in greater numbers than ever before, and coming
chiefly from papal and pagan lands, need the Book. But looking beyond
this to foreign fields, the largest missionary operations of our Church are
among the yellow men of the East. To-day all eyes are turned to Japan,
whose wonderful people, emerging from their hermit state but a half
century ago, has sprung into such world-wide prominence, renown and
power, through the adoption of Western civilization, through education, and
through the prowess of arms on land and sea. What is to be their influence
in the future history of the world it is taxing our imagination to picture.
These heathen people, with such immense potentialities, are now wonder-
fully open to the Bible and its saving truth. Are we not specially called to
give it to them — yea, to sow down the fertile soil with the seed, which is
the Word of God, that they may be saved from heathenism and infidelity,
and be raised up to aid us in the evangelization of the East? The Koreans,
over whom Japan seems likely to exert a controlling influence in the future,
are also awakening in a marvellous way to the reception of the Gospel.
Are we not loudly called to give the Word to them? And the Chinese, after
the sleep of ages, are now in an astonishing manner opening their minds
and hearts to the truth, asking for the Scriptures to an extent which the
Bible Societies have been utterly unable to meet. Is not this also a call
upon us which none can fail to hear to give to these millions of hungry
souls the bread of life which has been entrusted to us?
And what shall we say further of our Cuban neighbors on the South, so
long fed with chaff, who are now crying for the satisfying portion which
God's Word alone can give? And of our sable brethren of the Congo, whom
the Bible Societies has not yet been able to reach in giving them the
Scriptures in their own tongue? These plain facts, staring us in the face,
make the call loud, clear and imperative, that we should send out God's
Word to an extent greater than we have ever done in the past.
3. The financial straits of the American Bible Society, our agent for the per-
formance of this work.
Mention was made in our last report of the financial crisis which had
overtaken the Society some eighteen months ago through the heavy falling
off in receipts from legacies; and also of the gratifying rally to its help
which served to avert the threatening calamity of a serious curtailment of
its work. But while this pressing danger was tided over and the Society
was enabled to begin its year's operations with a small balance in its
treasury, through the continued shortage of legacies the receipts this year
have been considerably smaller than those of the preceding year, and
utterly insufficient for the proper prosecution of its work. True, the gifts
of the living, as coming from individuals, church collections and the dona-
tions of local societies, have been larger than at any time before. But
legacies, which have been a large means of support in the past, have been
APPENDIX. 93
so short as distressingly to cut down the resources of the Society. It has,
therefore, been unable to expand its operations, to meet many urgent calls
which have come for the Scriptures, or even to maintain adequately the
work which had been undertaken. This is a matter of serious significance
and concern.
4. Our own contributions for the cause.
The statistical reports of the Presbyteries to the last Assembly showed an
aggregate amount for the Bible cause of $6,770.00. This was an increase of
about 40 per cent, over the reported receipts of the previous year and the
average of late years, due perhaps largely to the special collections raised in
connection with the Centennial Bible Day and in response to the emer-
gency appeals occasioned by the crisis referred to. Whether the reported
contributions of this year will equal those of last year we must wait to see.
But the question naturally arises, Are we doing our duty toward this im-
portant cause? Last year's increased contributions showed an average of
less than three cents per member. Is that the measure of our obligations?
The committee is well aware that difficulties stand in the way of the
annual collection for this object. The American Bible Society is not directly
under our control, and being undenominational does not get as close to our
people as our own Church agencies do. And the ordered collection coming
on the third Sabbath in October, a month originally assigned to foreign
missions, which still holds the first claim, prevents many churches from
contributing as they otherwise would. But the worst feature is that so
many of our large and wealthy congregations do little or nothing for this
cause. Cannot something be done to remedy these deficiencies?
The annual report of the American Bible Society for the year ending
March 31, 1905, shows a circulation of the Scriptures during the year of
1,831,096, an increase of 60,205 volumes over last year's circulation. The
gifts for the year are reported as follows: From legacies, $36,129.63; from
donations of auxiliaries, $30,410.60; from church collections, $54,419.79; from
individuals, $45,564.40, showing an aggregate of $166,524.42, which is
$37,525.41 less than that of last year. According to these figures, the gifts
of the living increased about $8,000, but receipts from legacies decreased
about $45,000.
Upon a careful consideration of all these facts, your committee is fully
persuaded:
(1) That this great work demands expansion. Curtailment should no
longer be countenanced. The world needs and calls for the Bible, and it
should be given to the people of all lands. We who have it and enjoy its
priceless benefit, as its entrusted custodians are under imperative obliga-
tions to sow, and sow freely and fully, this seed of the kingdom. Every
interest of the Church and the world demands it.
(2) That the living must support the weak hereafter. Legacies may con-
tinue to come in in some measure, and are always welcomed; but they appear
to be diverted to other objects, and we must henceforth depend upon the
living to give the support needed. This will doubtless be the better for the
cause, and will prove no heavy burden if all participate.
(3) That our own Church should do a better part by this work in which
the progress of our own missions is so deeply and thoroughly involved.
94
APPENDIX.
The committee, therefore, respectfully suggests:
(1) That the General Assembly, with a renewed expression of its pro-
found appreciation of this great and important work, again call upon our
churches to raise during the present year at least $10,000 for the Bible
cause.
(2) That our Presbyteries be urged to use such means as in their judg-
ment may be best to secure the presentation of this cause and the raising
of a collection for it in all of their churches, if not on the third Sabbath in
October, then on some other day which may be more convenient.
Respectfully, THOS. H. LAW, Chairman.
X. THE SIXTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE ASSEMBLY'S PERMANENT
COMMITTEE OF CHURCH AND CHRISTIAN EDUCATION.
Your Permanent Committee of Church and Christian Education do make
the following report:
In working out the "Plan of Organization" adopted by the Assembly in 1899,
and approved and adopted by nearly all the Presbyteries and Synods, the
chairman of this committee has during the past year sought to keep in touch
with the entire Church through the Stated Clerks, and through the chair-
men of the permanent committees of the Synods and Presbyteries, urging
them to give due consideration to this cause at their stated meetings, and
asking for information of the progress of the work. Hundreds of per-
sonal letters have been written to these officials, and also to others who ask
for suggestions to guide them. The report to the last Assembly was
mailed to every minister in the Church.
Your chairman has had so many assurances of the value of that report
as an exposition of the aims and principles of this great movement, that
we deem it appropriate to refer all who are interested to that report as
found in the appendix to the Assembly's Minutes for 1904.
The "Plan of Organization" and "the Constitution for Presbyterian Church
Schools" will be printed in the appendix to this report, as heretofore, for
easy reference.
The reports received from many Synods and Presbyteries suggest the
following points:
1. No abatement of interest is reported, but a steady increase in many
quarters. Still it is evident that few realize the immense possibilities of tbe
various departments of the work of the Church and Christian education.
Some are interested in collegiate work, male or female; some in preparatory
schools under control of Presbyteries; some in private schools; some in
mission schols; some in parochial schools; a few in work among the
colored people; a few in making the public schools more distinctly Chris-
tian. Very few seem to realize that there is a great work to be done every-
where in all these directions. Others again report that while they recog-
nize the great need, there seem to be no openings for work in any direc-
tion. They fail to see that the field is white for the harvest.
2. There has been no retrograde movement reported anywhere, but some
have been discouraged by the partial failure of enterprises in which they
APPENDIX. 95
are engaged. It has not always been easy to secure proper teachers to
insure success. There is also a disposition to despise the day of small
things, and to project enterprises too large for the means in sight, with the
expectation of a larger liberality to liquidate debts. Then, again, it is so
easy to make a budget of expenses on large expectations of success, and find
a deficit at the end of the year. It is also difficult to appoint as trustees
such men as always succeed with everything they undertake.
3. Such discouragements are incident to all enterprises, and can bo
obviated, or reduced to a minimum, by experience, on the one hand, and by
a more careful conformity to the principles laid down by the Assembly in
the fundamental law already referred to. Debt is the bane of all such
enterprises, and a deficit ought certainly to be provided for in advance.
A clean balance sheet is always an inspiration for the future. A deficit
destroys confidence, inspires criticism, and alienates friends.
4. One mistake frequently made is this: The introduction of administra-
tive matters into the Church courts instead of leaving them to the trustees,
according to the "Constitution for schools under Church control." Serious
mischief has been done in several quarters during the past year in this way.
It seems so easy for trustees to seek the "backing of the Presbytery," and thus
transfer the responsibility for success to the court. Such matters as these,
location of schools, selection of teachers, pledging salaries, the projecting
of enlargements, the pledging of patronage and financial support, have been
thrust upon the Church courts and acted upon by them. This has in
some cases developed friction and alienations, to the damage of the in-
terests involved, and the divided responsibility points to disaster in the end.
Reports for information are often helpful; reports to be passed upon in an
administrative way by the Church court must needs be harmful.
5. In our home mission fields, notably in Kentucky and in North Carolina,
education becomes the handmaid of religion in a marvellous way; and the
teaching preacher realizes the largest success, just as in the days of our
fathers, when the teaching preacher laid the foundations of Presbyterianism
broad and deep; and they were not secularized thereby. Division of labor
is right enough where circumstances are favorable and means are abundant,
but the work must not tarry for an ideal division of labor, else the oppor-
tunity has passed. Every Presbytery has its mission fields, and many
churches have their own special mission work. The milling populations are
rapidly growing and present a need for Christian schools that cannot be
ignored except at our peril. Will the Church arise to the occasion?
6. Your committee would emphasize the great need and the great open-
ings for the Christian school among the colored people. We do not refer so
much to large, pretentious schools, located here and there. These are well
enough to furnish candidates for the ministry and teachers for schools of
lower grade. But they need the consecrated primary teacher alongside
of every church to train the children for Christ. Our Church ought to take
the lead in this matter, as we seek to found and foster an African Presby-
terian Church in our midst.
7. The use of the Bible as a text-book is steadily gaining ground in all
the schools in which our Church is directly interested, and the agitation has
introduced the Bible and some devotional exercises more and more into
96
APPENDIX.
the public schools, especially in the towns. This is more neglected in the
country districts for obvious reasons. The country schools are not so well
organized, and are not so much under the influence of a growing public
sentiment.
8. Two Synods, North Carolina and Texas, were reported last year as
taking up collections for this cause. We note movements in the same
direction in other quarters.
9. There is some growth of parochial schools proper, under the care of par-
ticular sessions; but these attract but little attention, being entirely local.
The real obstacle here, however, is the presence of the public schools; and
movements for parochial schools would often be construed into antagonism
to the State schools. Some begin to understand that there is room for both,
and that both would be better for the rivalry.
10. Your committee made certain recommendations in their last report,
which were not definitely adopted or rejected by the last Assembly. We
take the liberty of bringing them again to your attention. The proposal
may be considered premature at this time, but we are sure that some such
action will be taken at no distant date. Several sister churches have been
working for years under a similar scheme with the best results, which amply
vindicate the wisdom of their policy. The recommendations are as follows:
(1) That the Assembly appoint an annual collection for Church and
Christian Education, which shall be, for the present, distributed within the
bounds of the various Synods, so that each Synod can use for its own
necessities whatever sums sball be collected within its bounds.
(2) That rules and regulations for the administration of such funds
shall be prepared by the Assembly's Committee of Church and Christian
Education, and reported to the next Assembly.
(3) That this collection shall be taken in the month of ,
each year.
(4) That the Assembly elect a Secretary of Church and Christian Educa-
tion, at this meeting, who shall, at a small salary, devote a part of his time
to the furtherance of this cause; and this secretary shall be, ex-offlcio, chair-
man of the Assembly's permanent committee.
(5) That one-fifth of all collections for this cause shall be sent to the
Assembly's committee, to be used in paying the salary of the secretary, his
necessary travelling expenses, and the expenses of the committee, and, in
general, for the furtherance of the cause.
The Assembly's Committee of Church and Christian Education is con-
stituted as follows: Rev. J. B. Shearer, D. D., chairman; Rev. J. R. Howerton,
D. D., Rev. A. J. McKelway, D. D.; Rev. J. R. Bridges, D. D.; Hon. Geo. E.
Wilson, Rev. E. W. Smith, D. D., Rev. L. H. Blanton, D. D., Rev. Geo. Sum-
mey, D. D., Rev. F. T. McFaden, Rev. M. D. Hardin, D. D., Rev. W. L. Lingle,
and Elder W. M. Anderson, secretary and treasurer.
The expenses of this committee during the past year amount to $61.38.
The committee requests the Assembly to authorize the treasurer to pay
these expenses as heretofore.
This report was adopted by a meeting of the committee held in Charlotte,
N. C, May 13, 1905. Respectfully submitted,
J. B. SHEARER, Chairman.
APPENDIX. 97
XI. REPORT OF THE PERMANENT COMMITTEE ON THE SABBATH
AND FAMILY RELIGION.
The Committee on Sabbath Observance would report to the Assembly that
they have received fifty-three reports from the eighty-two Prebyteries. From
these reports it appears that the general status of the Sabbath question
remains very much the same as per last report. Ministers are reported as
generally faithful in presenting to their people the claims and obligations
of the Fourth Commandment. Presbyteries, in many instances, have held
conferences and mass-meetings, with a view of awakening a deeper interest,
and with seeming success. Sunday travelling and traffic continue about as
heretofore, if not on the increase. Freight trains run with the same fre-
quency, in many instances there being little or no difference between Sun-
day and any other day. So the Sunday newspaper continues widening its
circulation. The reports show, as heretofore, that while our own people
observe the day fairly well, it is slowly but steadily losing its hold upon the
masses. Only two or three of the Presbyteries report anything like im-
provement, all the rest report degeneracy both in views and practices. All
of which shows the greater necessity for us, instead of relaxing our hold, to
put forth greater effort looking to a more correct public sentiment and deeper
reverence for the day.
The last Assembly enlarged the sphere of your committee, looking to better
family training on the subject. We heartily agree with them as to the
importance of such training. God has made the family the training school,
not only for the formation of character, but also for the instillation of prin-
ciples to guide in after life. Unless trained up in the way in which they
should go, there is no promise that our children will be found in the way
in which they should go when they are old. Our reports from the Presby-
teries are so meagre that we are unable at this time to report anything with
definiteness on the subject. We can but only ask the Assembly that they
emphasize the action of the last, by insisting upon it that the Presbyteries
urge Christian parents, not only to train their children in a deeper reverence
for the day, but also in accompanying the precept with their own example.
And furthermore, that your committee might have suitable data for their
next report, that they also require the churches to embody in their reports
to the Presbyteries their fidelity in this respect.
The last Assembly also instructed your committee to open correspondence
with the different Christian bodies with a view of having a general confer-
ence or congress on the subject of Sabbath observance. As the time for
their meetings is in the spring, we have not yet been able to effect such
arrangement. We have written to a few of those bodies, but have not yet
had time to receive an answer. Such a conference would doubtless be pro-
ductive of great good, if it could only be made general. Whether those
bodies would be willing to enter into such an alliance remains to be seen.
There is one general fact that we would emphasize by bringing to your
attention, and that is the frequency of railroad accidents of late. These
have been so frequent that the secular papers have even called attention to
the same. In one of our leading journals the question was asked, "What
ails our railroads?" Hardly a day passes but that we read of another
98 APPENDIX.
terrible smashup. The front pages of the papers are lined with the lists
of the killed and wounded. Black type headlines setting forth the an-
nouncement of such catastrophes have come to greet the reader with such
regularity that they are conspicuous when they are absent." After this
statement, the editor ventured to give the following explanations of these dis-
asters:
First, the multiplication of railroads and increased mileage; second, the
increase of speed in travel; third, the growing carelessness on part of rail-
road officials in view of their enlarged experience in running of trains. The
mere statement of these so-called explanations is sufficient to show their
utter futility. If asked, we could easily give a truer and far more satis-
factory answer. The difficulty is the same as that which made the chariot
wheels of Pharaoh of old "drive so heavily." These corporations are openly
fighting against the Lord; robbing Him of his rights, not only in the running
of passenger trains, for which they might plead a show of necessity and
mercy, but more especially in the running of freight trains, in direct con-
flict with the express and known statute, "Thou shalt do no work" on His
holy day. In only few of the States are freight trains forbidden to run on
the Lord's day. In all the others this traffic is as great as on other days;
thus robbing God of His rights, ignoring His authority, and trampling it
under foot; and withal, robbing millions of employees of their God-given
right in the enjoyment of their day of rest. And what is sadder still, a
great nation of Christian people looking on with hardly a word of protest!
Need we, then, be astonished at the frequency of these accidents — not only
accompanied, as they are, with an immense loss of property, but also many
valuable lives. Nothing is ever made in our attempts to rob the Lord. In
every instance He gets back more than we take from Him. "He pardons
iniquity as a God." So in His judgments He reaps with the same lavish
hand.
"We are well aware that this is not the world of rewards and punishments,
but as we have said in a former report, and we would here emphasize the
same by repetition, that retribution clearly begins here, but the judgments
are sent with only sufficient frequency to show the divine displeasure, and
to furnish a prophecy and pledge of what is to be hereafter. The law is too
plain, the offence too presumptuous, the light too great; and more than this,
we are drawing too near the latter day glory, ever to hope to trample under
foot His law, and yet escape His displeasure. So long as the nation shows
such utter disregard for His authority, so long may we expect the con-
tinued repetition of these and other so-called accidents.
By way of encouragement, and to show that there are some at least in
the country who are still zealous for the claims of the Sabbath, we may
mention a fact of common notoriety. Upon indictment by a grand jury in
one of the counties in the State of Georgia, one of the leading systems of
railroads in that State was fined $1,000 for violation of the State statute
against running of freight trains on the Lord's day. The case was ap-
pealed to the Supreme Court, but that court sustained the judgment of the
court below. Respectfully,
JAMES STACY, Chairman.
May 13, 1905.
APPENDIX. 99
XII. REPORT OF AD-INTERIM COMMITTEE ON REVISION OF PROOF
TEXTS.
The committee appointed by the General Assembly of 19C3, and continued
by the Assembly of 1904, to revise the proof texts in our Doctrinal Standards,
beg leave to submit herewith for the consideration of the present Assembly
a list of the changes thought by the committee to be advisable.
An inspection of the list will show that passages of doubtful genuineness
or interpretation, together with such as are irrelevant, have been rejected,
and that additional proof has been supplied where required.
It is also suggested by the committee that all proof texts be printed in
full in the Standards, except when whole chapters are cited — this rule to
apply to what is not altered, as well as to what is added.
W. T. HALL,
R. A. WEBB,
G. B. STRICKLER,
F. R. BEATTIE,
S. A. KING.
Confession of Faith.
Rules observed in this revision:
1. Passages of doubtful genuineness rejected.
2. Passages of doubtful interpretation not cited.
3. Passages which are irrelevant discarded.
4. Texts cited, as far as possible, in the order of supposed strength in the
way of proof.
5. Additional proof cited where required.
6. All proof texts to be printed in full, except where whole chapters are
cited — this rule to apply to what is not altered, as well as to what is added.
Chapter I. — Sec. I c, Heb. i, first clause of verse 2 to be added; Sec. IV i,
I John v: 9, omitted under Rule 3; Sec. VIII s, Acts xvii: 11, added under
Rule 5.
Chapter II. — Sec. Ill j, I John v: 7, rejected under Rule 1.
Chapter III. — Sec. I m, Isa. xiv: 6, 7, added under Rule 5; n, Psalm v: 4,
added under Rule 5; Sec. IV t, John x: 14-16, 27, 28, added under Rule 5;
Sec. VI x, I Peter i: 2, added under Rule 5.
Chapter IV. — Sec. I h, Gen. i: 1-3, added under Rule 5; i, Jer. x: 12, added
under Rule 5; j, Ex. xx: 11, added under Rule 5.
Chapter V. — Sec. I s, Neh. ix: 6, added under Rule 5; Sec. IV f, Isa. xlv: 7,
added under Rule 5; Sec. VI m, Mark iv: 11, added under Rule 5.
Chapter VI.— Sec. I t, Rom. v: 20, 21, added under Rule 5; Sec. Ill y,
John iii: 6, added under Rule 5; Sec. IV a, Gen. vi: 5, added under Rule 5;
Sec. V c, I John i: 8, 10, added under Rule 5; Sec. VI f, Rom. ii: 15, added
under Rule 5.
Chapter VII. — Sec. I m, Job xxxv: 7, 8, omit; Sec. II n, Hos. vi: 7, omit;
Rom. v: 12-19, I Cor. xv: 22, 47, add; o, Rom. v: 12-14, add; Sec. Ill q. Rom.
xi: 20, 21, add; r, Matt, xvii: 18-20, add; s, Acts xiii: 48, Luke xi: 13, Gal.
iii: 14, add; Sec. VI z, II Cor. iii: 7-11, omit; a, II Cor. Iiiu 9-11, add; b, Matt.
100
APPENDIX.
xxviii: 19, omit; Luke ii: 32, Acts x: 34, 35, add; c, Heb. viii, 7-9, omit; d,
Rom. iii: 20, 21, iv: 16, 17, 23, 24, Heb. i: 1, 2, add.
Chapter VIII. — Sec. I h, Isa. ix: 6, 7, add; k, II Cor. v: 10, add; m, Rom.
viii: 30, add; Sec. II n, Heb. ii: 14, add; Sec. VII o, John x: 17, 18, add.
Chapter IX.— Sec. II w, Col. iii: 10, add.
Chapter X. — Sec. I, I John iii: 5, Tit. iii: 5, I Peter i: 23, add; Sec. Ill r,
Gen. xvii, 7, Ps. cv: 8-10, Ezek. xvi: 20, 21, I Sam. i: 20, Jer. i: 5, Rom. ix:
II, 13, Mai. i: 2, 3, Luke i: 15, II Sam. xii: 23, add; Sec. IV u, Matt, xiii: 14,
15, Acts xxviii: 24, add; v, Matt, vii: 22, add.
Chapter XII.— Sec. I s, II Cor. vi: 18, add; Sec. u, Heb. iv: 16, add.
Chapter XIII.— Sec. I f, John xvii, 17, 19, add; h, Gal. v: 16, 17, Rom. vii:
17, IS, 23, add; Sec. II m, I Peter ii: 11, add.
Chapter XIV.— Sec. I s, II Cor. iv: 13, omit; s, Phil, i: 29, Heb. xii: 2, add;
t, I Cor. i: 21, add; Rom. x: 14, add.
Chapter XV. — Sec. IV m, Rom. viii: 1, omit last clause; Sec. VI r, II Cor.
ii: 7, add.
Chapter XVI.— Sec. I s, Deut. iv: 2, add; t, Rom. x: 2, I Sam. xv: 20, add;
Sec. Ill i, Acts xxvi: 6-7, omit; Sec. V h, Ps. xvi: 2, Rom. viii: 22, 23, omit.
Chapter XVII.— Sec. II v. Rom. viii: 29-39, add.
Chapter XIX. — Sec. I a, Job xxviii: 28, omit; Sec. VI k, Rom. viii: 1,
omit last clause.
Chapter XX. — Sec. I w, I Thess. i: 10, add; x, Col. i: 13, add; a, Eph. ii:
18, Heb. x: 19, Gal. iv: 6, add; Sec. II f, James iv: 12. add; h, to Gal. ii: 4,
add verse 3; Sec. IV, 1, I Tim. iii: 45, Titus I: 13, Matt, xviii: 17, 18, Rom.
xiii: 3, 4, add.
Chapter XXI.— Sec. I, o, Acts xvii: 24, 25, Deut. iv: 15-20, Col. ii: 23, add;
Sec. II n, Col. iii: 17, add; Sec. IV, a, John xvii: 20, II Sam. vii: 29, add; Sec.
V, i, Neh. x: 29, add; j, Isa. xix: 21, add; k, Esther iv: 16, add; 1, Esther ix:
22, add; Sec. VI q, Deut. vi: 6. 7, Acts x: 2, add; v, Josh, xxiv: 15, omit;
t, Acts, xiii: 42, Luke iv, 16, add; Sec. VII, u, to Isa. lvi: 6, add verse 7;
Sec. VIII, y, Ex. xx: 8, add.
Chapter XXII.— Sec. II, d, Matt, v: 33, 37, add; e, II Cor. i: 23, add; f,
Neh. xiii: 25, add; Sec. Ill, i, Ex. xxir: 11, add; Sec. VI, o, Psalm lxvi: 13,
14, add.
Chapter XXIII.— Sec. II, s, Rom. xiii: 1-4, add; Sec. Ill, .at, Eph. iv: 11, 12,
add; Mai. ii: 7, omit; y, Rom. xiii: 16. add; a, I Tim. ii: 1, omit; Sec. IV h,
II Tim. ii: 24, I Peter v: 2, add.
Chapter XXIV. — Section I, i, Gen. ii: 24, Matt, xiii: 4-6, Rom. vii: 3, add;
Mark i under this letter should be Mark x; Sec. II, k, Gen. ix: 1, add; Sec.
III, m, Heb. xiii, 4, add.
Chapter XXV.— Sec. II, a, Col. i: 13, add; b, Psalm lxxii, refer., add; b,
to Matt, xiii add verse 3; Sec. IV, f, Acts ii: 41, 42, add; Sec. V, g, I Cor. i: 2,
add; h, Rom. xi: 20-22, add; i, Psalm lxxii, 16, add; Sec. VI, k, I Peter v:
2-4, add.
Chapter XXVI.— Sec. I, 1, Rom. vi: 5, 6, Rom. viii: 17, add.
Chapter XXVIL— Sec. Ill, a, Luke xx: 18-20, I Cor. ii: 26, add.
Chapter XXVIII.— Sec. I, d, Mark xvi: 16, omit; e, Acts ii: 41, add; e, Gal.
iii: 27, 28, omit; f, Gal. iii: 29, add; g, Rom. vi: 5, omit; i, Acts xxii: 16, add;
j, Col, iii: 1, add; Sec. II, 1, Eph. iv: 11-13, add; Sec. Ill, m, Acts i: 5, Com-
APPENDIX. 101
pared with Acts ii: 2, 3, 4, 17, add; Acts 11: 15, 16, add; m, Acts ii: 41, omit; m
Acts x: 47, add; Sec. IV, n, Mark xvi: 15, 16, Acts viii: 37, omit; n, Acts ii:
41, xix: 4, add; o, Matt, xxviii: 19, omit; Sec. V, p. Exodus iv: 24, 25, 26,
omit; p, Genesis xvii: 14, add; q, Acts x: 2, 4, 22, 31, 45, 47, omit; q, Acts
x: 44-47, add; Sec. VI, s, Rom. iv: 11 (first clause), add; t, Eph. i: 4, 5, Acts
xvi: 31, 33, add; Sec. VII, u, Titus iii: 5, omit; u, Hebrews vi: 1, 2, add; u,
Eph. ii: 1, II Peter iii: IS, add.
Chapter XXIX.— Sec. I, v, Matt, xxvi: 26, 27, Luke xxii: 19, 20, add; Sec.
II, w, Heb. x: 10, 11, 12, 14, add; y, I Cor. ii: 24-26, add.
Chapter XXX.— Sec. I, 1, Acts xx: 17, 28, add; 1, Titus i: 5, add; 1, Eph, i:
22, 23, John xviii: 36, add; Sec. Ill, n, II Sam. xii: 14, add; Sec. IV, o, Matt,
xviii: 17, print in full as first reference in section.
Chapter XXXI.— Sec. IV, u, Matt, xxii: 21, add.
Chapter XXXII. — Sec. I, x, Rom. viii: 23, Rev. vii: 14, 15, Rev. xxii: 4, add;
y, Psalm ix: 17; y, Jude 5-7, instead 5, 7; i, insert yy after "now"; Luke
xvi: 22, 23. 26. II Cor. v: 8, add; Sec. II, s Luke xxiv: 39, John xx: 27, add.
Chapter XXXIII.— Sec. I, c, Matt, xxv: 31-34, add; e, I Cor. vi: 3, omit;
f, I Cor. iii: 13-15, Matt, xxv: 21, add; Sec. II, g, Matt, xxv: 21, omit; g, Eph.
ii: 4-7, add in full; h, Rom. ix: 22, omit; i, Psalm xvi: 11, add.
The Larger Catechism.
Question 4, Letter g, Isa. lxvi: 1, omitted under Rule 5; Amos ix: 2-4,
omitted under Rule 5; Psalm Ixxvii, omitted under Rule 3; Psalm cxxxviii:
2, substituted; Psalm cxix: IS, substituted; j, Rom. iii: 19, 27, omitted under
Rule 3; Rom. xvi: 25, 27, substituted.
Question 6, Letter o, I John v: 7, rejected under Rule 1; Matt, iii: 16, 17,
substituted; p, Isa, xlvi: 9, 10, added under Rule 5.
Question 7, Letter w, Gen. xvii: 1, omitted under Rule 3; Rom. xi: 35, 36,
substituted; z, I Kings viii: 27, omitted under Rule 3; Psalm cxlv: 3, sub-
stituted.
Question 9, Letter i, I John v: 7, omitted under Rule 1.
Question 10, Letter j, Psalm ii: 6, 7, added under Rule 5.
Question 16, Letter y, Psalm civ: 4, omit, under Rule 2; Matt, xxii: 30,
substituted; z, Luke xx: 36, substituted for Matt, xxii: 30.
Question 17, Letter j, Gen. i: 26, 27, 26 added to complete statement.
Question 18, Letter s, Neh. ix: 6, added under Rule 5.
Question 19, Letter w, John viii: 44, omitted under Rule 3; z, Psalm civ: 4,
omitted under Rule 2; Psalm ciii: 20, substituted.
Question 20, Letter y, Hosea vi: 7, omitted under Rule 2.
Question 32, Letter o, II Cor. iv: 13, omit; Phil, i: 29, add.
Question 76, Letter h, II Cor. vii: 10, add; i, John xvi: 8, 9, add; q, Luke
xix: 8, Rom. vi: 17, 18, add.
Question 77, Letter i, Jer. xxxi: 33, add; t, Gal. v: 22, -23, add; u, Rom.
4: 4-S, v: 16, add; x, Jas. iii: 2, add; y, I Kings viii: 46, Prov. xx: 9, Eccl.
7: 20, add.
Question 79, Letter d, Rom. viii: 35-39, add; e, Jer. xxxii: 40, add; f, John
x: 28, Rom. viii: 35-39, add; g, Rom. viii: 34, add.
Question 80, Letter n, I John ii: 3, iii: 14, iii: 19, add.
Question 81, Letter o, II Peter i: 10, Is. 1: 10, Ps. xxxi: 22, I Cor. ii: 28, add.
p, I John v: 13, add; q, Cant, v: 2, 3, 6, omit.
102
APPENDIX.
Question 82, Letter r, I Cor. v: 6, 8, Phil, i: 23, 24, add.
Question 85, Letter d, Ps. cxvi: 15, add.
Question 86, Letter g, Acts vii: 55, 59, Rev. vii: 13, 14, add; h, Phil, i: 23,
add; 1, I Kings ii: 10, John ii: 11, add.
Question 88, Letter s, Matt, xvi: 27, add.
Question 89, Letter v, Matt, xxii: 12, Luke xix: 22, add.
Question 97, Letter a, Rom. vii: 24, 25, add.
XIII. REPORT OF THE TRUSTEES OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
To the Venerable the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the
United States, in Annual Session at Fort Worth, Texas:
Your Trustees respectfully submit the following report for the fiscal year
ending April 27, 1905:
The balance on hand from last year's report is $220.41, and we have on
certificate of deposit in bank $7,460.70. During this fiscal year we have
received from all sources $39,342.85, making a total of $39,563.26, and we
have disbursed $32,054.69, leaving a balance in the hands of the Treasurer
of $47.87, all of which disbursements were made to the different causes of
the Church as directed by the donors thereof, and for a detail statement of
receipts and disbursements you are respectfully referred to the accounts of
the Secretary and Treasurer, duly audited and approved, which account is
hereto appended and made a part of this report.
You will notice from this report that we have on certificate of deposit in
bank $7,460.70, which amount was received on account of the legacy of Mr.
Norman T. Leonard, of Westfield, Mass., and there will be other sums re-
ceived from this legacy in the future, the amount of which we have no
knowledge, as it is dependent on the sale of real estate. By the terms of
this will the funds in question were directed after the expiration of the life
estate therein, to be divided equally between the American Bible Society,
the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and to the
Trustees of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United
States, for the use and benefit of said Church, commending, though not
adjoining (enjoining) upon said Trustees due consideration of the Choctaw
Mission, in which field our beloved and venerated friend, Rev. Cyrus Bying-
ton, ministered.
By a codicil to the will the testator revoked the request to tne American
Bible Society and bequeathed that legacy to the Trustees of the General
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States, "to be appro-
priated by said Trustees for the foreign missionary work, or sustentation, or
both, as they may deem it expedient."
Your Board of Trustees respectfully ask for specific instructions, not only
for the disbursement of the amount now on hand, but for the balance of
this legacy which is to come into our hands, and for your instruction and
information we append a copy of this will to our report.
The term of the following officers expire with this meeting of the Board:
Rev. M. D. Hardin, Messrs. Geo. E. Wilson, and A. G. Brenizer, and your
Board would unanimously recommend the re-election of these gentlemen.
APPENDIX. 1 03
Your officers now constituting the Board are: Dr. E. Nye Hutchison, presi-
dent; Mr. Geo. E. Wilson, vice-president and attorney; J. R. Pharr, secretary
and treasurer. Respectfully submitted,
E. NYE HUTCHISON, President.
Annual Report of John R. Pharr, Treasurer of Trustees of the Southern
General Assembly.
Dr.
1904.
April 28. — To Balance on hand this day as per acc't rendered :
Foreign Missions $1,500 00
Mt. Horeb church 1,800 00
Wm. Workman Fund 5,550 00
Sustentation, Moore legacy 500 00
Augusta Presbyterian church 400 00
Education, Mecklenburg Presbytery, S. P. A. 5,000 00
Cash on hand — in bank 220 41
$14,970 41
Cash Receipts.
July 19. — To Norman T. Leonard, bequest $7,646 72
July 19. — To Norman T. Leonard, interest on certificate
of deposit 206 65
$7,853 37
Less 5 per cent 392 67
$ 7,460 70
July 19.— To Contingent Fund, N. T. L 392 67
Oct. 1. — To John M. Sutton, interest $ 368 41
Less 5 per cent 18 42
349 99
Oct. 1.— To Contingent Fund, J. M. S 18 42
Oct. 1.— To S. P. Alexander Fund, interest 241 00
Less 5 per cent 12 05
228 95
Oct. 1.— To Contingent Fund, S. P. A 12 05
Oct. 1.— To Mary J. Moore, legacy $ 450 00
Less 5 per cent 22 50
427 50
Oct. 1.— To Contingent Fund, M. J. M 22 50
Oct. 1. — To Wm. Workman Fund, interest 166 50
Oct. 1. — To Mt. Horeb church, interest 54 00
Oct. 1. — To Foreign Missions, interest 45 00
Nov. 28. — To Mrs. Mary L. Wilson, Invalid Fund $ 100 00
Nov. 28. — To Mrs. Mary L. Wilson, Home Missions 200 00
Nov. 28. — To Mrs. Mary L. Wilson, Foreign Missions 700 00
1,000 00
Nov. 28. — To Mrs. Mary L. Wilson, Foreign Missions $ 300 00
Less 5 per cent 15 00
285 00
104
APPENDIX.
Nov. 28. — To Contingent Fund, M. L. W 15 00
Dec. 27. — To Sarah C. Ball, bequest to sustentation 25,000 00
1905.
Feb. 16. — To Sustentation, interest on Moore legacy 30 00
Feb. 20. — To Susan M. Stewart, for Foreign Missions $3,019 95
Less 5 per cent 151 00
2,868 95
Feb. 20.— To Contingent Fund, S. M. S 151 00
Feb. 20.— To Dr. T. S. Stewart, legacy $ 432 12
Less 5 per cent 21 60
410 52
Feb. 20.— To Contingent Fund, T. S. S 21 60
Apr. 1. — To Win. Workman Fund, interest 166 50
Apr. 1. — To S. P. Alexander Fund, interest $ 93 00
Less 5 per cent 4 65
88 35
Apr. 1.— To Contingent Fund, S. P. A 4 65
Apr. 1. — To Mt. Horeb church, interest 54 00
Apr. L — To Foreign Missions, interest 45 00
Apr. 1. — To Augusta Presbyterian church, interest 24 00
Total receipts $39,432 85
Balance on hand brought down 14,970 41
Cash on hand consists of following funds:
Certificate of deposit in M. & F. Bank, Leonard legacy
Contingent Fund
$54,313
26
:=: ~ =z —
: ~
$7,460
70
47
87
$7,508
57
1904.
Ce.
-By S. P. Alexander Fund, check to J. W. Harry, Treas. .$ 298 43
-By Contingent Fund, attorney's fee in Leonard will. ... 10 00
-By Contingent Fund, attorney for Trustees 100 00
-By Contingent Fund, for bond of Treasurer 20 00
-By Mt Horeb church, check to K. B. Koiner, Treas 54 00
-By Mrs. Mary L. Wilson, check to S. H. Chester, Treas. . 700 00
-By Mrs. Mary L. Wilson, check to W. A. Powell, Treas. . 200 00
-By Contingent Fund, check to O. F. Blevins, for record-
ing deed 1 50
-By Sarah C. Ball, check to W. A. Powell, Treas 25,000 00
-By Contingent Fund, for affidavits in West will 1 50
-By Contingent Fund, for box rent, two years 20 00
-By Contingent Fund, for stationery, stamps and steno-
graphy ' 9 00
-By Susan M. Stewart, for Foreign Missions $2,868 95
May
17.
May
17.
May
27.
May
28.
Oct.
1.-
Dec.
2.
Dec.
2.
Dec.
13.
1905.
Jan.
11.
Feb.
4,
Mar.
4.
Mar.
24.
Mar.
24.
APPENDIX. 105
Mar. 24.— By Dr. T. S. Stewart, for- Foreign Missions 136 84
Mar. 24. — By Mrs. Mary L. Wilson, for Foreign Missions. 285 00
Mar. 24. — By Mary J. Moore, for Home Missions $ 85 50
Mar. 24. — By Foreign Missions, interest 45 00
Check to S. H. Chester, Treasurer $3,421 29
Mar. 24. — By Mary J. Moore, check to Rev. L. O. Spencer, Treas. . 85 50
Mar. 24. — By Mary J. Moore, for Home Missions 85 50
Mar. 24.— By Dr. T. S. Stewart, for Home Missions 136 84
Mar. 24. — By Sustentation, interest on Moore legacy 30 00
Check to W. A. Powell, Treasurer 252 34
Apr. 4. — By S. P. Alexander Fund, check to J. M. Harry, Treas. . 250 00
Apr. 4. — By Mt. Horeb church, check to K. B. Koiner, Treas 54 00
Apr. 5.— By Dr. T. S. Stewart, check to J. G. Snedecor (for
Tuscaloosa) 136 84
Apr. 5. — By Augusta Presbyterian church, check to J. N. Van
Devanter 24 00
Apr. 18. — By Foreign Missions, interest $ 45 00
Apr. 18. — By John M. Sutton, for Foreign Missions 87 49
Check to S. H. Chester, Treasurer 132 49
Apr. 18.— By John M. Sutton, for education $ S7 50
Apr. 18. — By Mary J. Moore, for education 85 50
Check to G. W. Macrae, Treasurer 173 00
Apr. 18.— By Mary J. Moore, for Invalid Fund $ 85 50
Apr. 18. — By Mrs. Mary L. Wilson, for Invalid Fund 100 00
Apr. 18.— By John M. Sutton, for Invalid Fund 87 50
Check to S. H. Hawes, Treasurer 273 00
Apr. 18.— By John M. Sutton, check to W. A. Powell, Treas S7 50
Apr. 18. — By Wm. Workman Fund, check to J. A. Cheek, Treas. . 333 00
Apr. 22. — By S. P. Alexander Fund, check to J. M. Harry, Treas. . 67 30
Apr. 25. — By Contingent Fund, 2 per cent, on $17,500; check to
J. R. Pharr, Treasurer 350 00
Total disbursements $32,054 69
Balance on hand and invested as follows:
Foreign Missions, Newton County bonds $1,500 00
Mt. Horeb church, Newton County bonds 1,800 00
Wm. Workman Fund Newton County bonds 3,700 00
Wm. Workman Fund, note Harry & Foreman 1,233 34
Wm. Workman Fund, Southern Real Estate, Loan &
Trust Co : 616 66
Augusta Presbyterian church, Southern Real Estate,
Loan & Trust Co 400 00
Sustentation, Moore legacy, Southern Real Estate, Loan
& Trust Co 500 00
106
APPENDIX.
Education, Mecklenburg Presbytery, Southern Real Es-
tate, Loan & Trust Co 5,000 00
Cash certificates of deposit in M. & F. Bank, Leonard
legacy 7,460 70
Cash on hand, in bank 47 87
$22,258 57
$54,313 26
XIV. REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON THE SUBJECT OF "CLOSER
RELATIONS WITH THE PRESBYTERIAN AND REFORMED
CHURCHES IN THE UNITED STATES."
The General Assembly of our Church, at its last meeting, adopted the fol-
lowing report of its Committee on the subject of "Closer Relations with the
Presbyterian and Reformed Churches in the United States":
"Your committee, to which were referred the various overtures and com-
munications to this General Assembly, on the subject of closer relations with
the Presbyterian and Reformed Churches in the United States, would re-
spectfully state that they have carefully considered the following overtures
and memorials: From the Synod of Alabama, and the Presbyteries of
Meridian, Mecklenburg and Enoree, and from a joint conference of represen-
tatives of the Reformed Presbyterian Church (General Synod), the Presby-
terian Church in the United States of America, and the United Presbyterian
Church, held in New York city December 9-10, 1903, all asking the appoint-
ment of a committee to confer with similar committees from other Churches
on the bringing about of closer relations and co-operations between the
various Reformed and Presbyterian Churches. Also we have considered a
memorial from the Presbytery of Nashville, asking this Assembly to assure
our sister Churches of our willingness to confer on the subject of closer
relations whenever such conference would be likely to result in closer
fellowship, but asking that the Assembly defer for a year the appointment
of a committee. We have had for our careful consideration overtures from
the Presbyteries of Arkansas, Ouachita and Red River, asking the appoint-
ment of a committee to confer with a committee of the Presbyterian Church
in the United States of America looking to closer relations with that Church.
We have considered also a communication from the Reformed Church in
America (Dutch) expressing their willingness to confer with a committee
from our Church on closer relations with us, and also overtures from our
Presbyteries of Durant, Wilmington, Tuscaloosa and North Alabama, asking
us to appoint a committee of conference with the Reformed Church in
America. We have also given due consideration to the action of the Pres-
byterian Church in the United States of America rescinding all former ex-
pressions of their General Assemblies, reflecting on the Christian character
of our Church; and this with a view to remove all obstacles to closer rela-
tions between the two Churches.
APPENDIX.
107
"Your committee recognize that there is not only in our own Church, but
also in other Churches holding the Presbyterian, Reformed and Calvinistic
system, a very general and strong desire for closer relations between these
Churches, whereby they may more effectively co-operate in the work of
Christ's kingdom.
"We, therefore, recommend that this Assembly, wishing to promote closer
fraternity in the spirit of love and candor, do appoint a committee of six
ministers and three Ruling Elders (which committee shall be named by the
Moderator), who shall be authorized and empowered to confer with similar
committees that may be appointed by other Presbyteries and Reformed
Churches, when notified that it is the wish of such other Churches to enter
into conference with us. And the committee appointed by this Assembly is
to confer on the subject of closer relations with such Churches as may enter
the conference with a view to discover: (1) The real sentiment of the
Churches on the subject; (2) the leadings of God's providence in the matter;
(3) the obstacles that may stand in the way of closer fellowship; (4)
Whether and how such obstacles can be removed; (5) and what may be the
nature and form of the relations which shall best secure effective co-operation
by federation or otherwise, and at the same time preserve loyalty to those
great principles for which the various churches have been called to testify.
"And this committee shall report to the next meeting of the General Assem-
bly the result of its conferences."
In accordance with this action, the following committee was appointed:
Rev. G. B. Strickler, D. D., Richmond, Va.; Rev. C. R. Hemphill, D. D.,
Louisville, Ky.; Rev. John F. Cannon, D. D., St. Louis. Mo.; Rev. J. H. Mc-
Neilly, D. D., Nashville, Tenn.; Rev. W. E. Boggs, D. D., Jacksonville, Fla.;
Rev. J. R. Howerton, D. D., Charlotte, N. C; Capt. C. N. Roberts, Sherman,
Texas; Hon. Charlton H. Alexander, LL. D., Jackson, Miss.; Thad. Harrison,
Esq., Mobile, Ala.; Rev. S. M. Neel, D. D., Kansas City, Mo.
This committee respectfully submits the following report:
1. The chairman of your committee was invited in July last to meet with
"the Executive Committee of the Joint Conference on Closer Relations be-
tween Presbyterian and Reformed Churches in the United States," to make
arrangements for a larger conference between the full committees of the
different Churches represented. This conference was helrt in Philadelphia
in September last, and agreed to call a general conference of the committee
to meet in Pittsburg, Penn., on the 29th of November, and proposed a ten-
tative plan of Federation to be presented for its consideration. Your chair-
man was not able to attend the meeting in Philadelphia, but the committee
was represented by Dr. C. R. Hemphill.
2. On the 29th of November, 1904, your committee met in Pittsburg, in con-
ference with committees from the following Churches: Reformed Presby-
terian Church (General Synod), Reformed Church in America, Presbyterian
Church in the U. S. A., Presbyterian Church in the U. S., United Presby-
terian Church, Cumberland Presbyterian Church, and Reformed Church in
the United States. The conference lasted for three days, and the subjects
designated were discussed with earnestness and in the spirit of fraternity,
in the attempt to formulate some plan by federation or otherwise by which
a closer fellowship of the Churches might be attained, and they might be
10b
APPEXDIX.
able to co-operate more effectively in the service of the Lord in extending the
kingdom in our country. It was found that the real sentiment of all the
Churches favored such co-operation in the general work as might be found
practicable, while each Church should retain its separate organization. The
obstacles in the way of closer relations than those now existing were freely
and frankly and kindly discussed with a view to their removal; and to dis-
cover a method of co-operation that would be effective and at the same time
preserve our distinctive principles. The joint conference formulated the
plan of federation accompanying this report, and resolved to send it to the
various Churches represented in the conference for such action as the
supreme judiciary of each Church might determine to take. And the joint
conference recommended that the Churches appoint committees to meet
hereafter in a similar conference, and take such further steps as may be
indicated by the action of the Churches as to this plan. Your committee,
therefore, hereby submits this plan for your consideration; and if you
should desire that further effort should be made for closer fellowship anu
co-operation, then we recommend that you appoint a committee of conference
to meet with the committees of the other Churches to perfect the plan and
put it into operation, if the way be clear, according to the method that may
appear to you wisest and best.
3. The following overture was referred to us by the last Assembly: The
Presbytery of St. Louis respectfully overtures the General Assembly at
Mobile, Ala., to request the Western Section of the Executive Commission
of the Reformed Churches holding the Presbyterian system to propose to the
Churches composing the alliance some plan for a closer alliance or affiliation
of the Young People's Societies of our various Churches.
To this overture we recommend that the Assembly give the following
answer:
We judge it best, for the present, at least, that our young people be kept,
as far as possible, under our own control and training, and that they be
accustomed to the use of our own literature and methods of work.
4. A copy of the action of our Assembly having been sent by our Stated
Clerk to the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, the
chairman of your committee received a letter from the Rev. W. H. Black,
D. D., chairman of their Committee on Closer Relations, expressing a readi-
ness to confer with us on that subject. This letter was considered by our
committee while at Pittsburg, and the chairman was instructed to say that
since the Cumberland Chureh was represented in the conference, and since
we were conferring with its representative as with the representatives of
other Churches, we did not consider another and different conference neces-
sary. Respectfully submitted,
G. B. STRICKLER, Chairman.
Report of the Joint Conference Committee on Closer Relations.
1. Resolved, That this Conference recommends to the careful consideration
of the Supreme Judicatories of the several Churches represented in it the
plan of federation set forth in the following articles as designed to promote
closer relations and more effective administrative co-operation among the
Reformed Churches holding the Presbyterian System.
APPENDIX. 109
Plan of Fedebation.
1. Every Church entering into this federation retains its distinct indi-
viduality, its own creed, government and worship, as well as every power,
jurisdiction and right which is not by these articles expressly and exclu-
sively delegated to the body hereby constituted.
2. For the prosecution of work that can be better done in union than sep-
arately an Ecclesiastical Council is hereby established, which shall be known
by the name and style of "The Federal Council of the Reformed Churches in
the United States of America holding the Presbyterian System."
3. The Federal Council shall consist of at least four representatives, min-
isters or elders, from each of the constituent Churches, for each one hun-
dred thousand communicants or fraction thereof up to three hundred thou-
sand, and where a Church has more than three hundred thousand communi-
cants, then four representatives, ministers or elders, for each additional two
hundred thousand communicants or fraction thereof. These persons shall be
chosen with their alternates under the direction of their respective supreme
judicatories in such manner as those judicatories shall respectively deter-
mine.
4. The Federal Council shall exercise only such authority as is conferred
upon it by these articles, or such as may hereafter be conferred upon it by the
federated Churches. It shall not interfere with the creed, worship or the
government of the Churches, and, in particular, all matters of. discipline
shall be left to the exclusive and final judgment of the ecclesiastical authori-
ties of the Churches concerned.
5. The Federated Council shall promote the co-operation of the Federated
Churches in their foreign missionary work, and also in their general work
in the United States of America, in connection with Home Missions, Work
Among the Colored People, Church Erection, Sabbath Schools, Publication and
Education; and may initiate movements having this co-operation in view
subject to the approval of the Churches concerned. The Council may also
advise and recommend in other matters pertaining to the general welfare of
the kingdom of Christ.
6. The Federal Council shall have power to deal with differences which
may arise between the Federated Churches in regard to matters within the
jurisdiction of the Council, which the constituted agencies of the Churches
concerned have been unable to settle, and which may be brought to the at-
tention of the Council by the supreme judicatories of the parties thereto;
and such differences shall thereupon be determined by the Council or by
such agencies as it may appoint. If determined by an agency, such as a
committee or commission, there shall be the right of appeal to the Council
for final decision. Every final decision shall be transmitted by the Council
to the supreme judicatories of the Churches concerned for their action.
7. The Federal Council shall have power to deal with any other matters of
interest common to any two or more of the Federated Churches which may
be referred to it by the supreme judicatories of the Churches concerned for
its action, with such authority in the premises and under such conditions as
may be agreed upon by^the Churches which make the reference.
8. The Federal Council shall have power to open and maintain a friendly
correspondence with the Presbyterian and other evangelical Churches for the
110
APPENDIX.
purpose of promoting concert of action in matters of common interest, but
nothing in this article shall be construed as affecting the present rights of
correspondence of the Federated Churches.
9. The Federal Council shall give full faith and credit to the acts, proceed-
ings and records of the duly constituted authorities of the several Federated
Churches.
10. The officers of the Federal Council shall be a President, Vice-President,
Stated Clerk, Treasurer, and such other subordinate officers as may be
necessary.
11. The Federal Council shall meet in regular session at least biennially,
and on its own adjournment, at such time and place as may be determined.
In the conduct of its meetings it shall respect the conscientious views of its
constituent members. The President shall call special meetings at any
time when requested so to do by a majority of the representatives of each
of two or more of the constituent bodies. Thirty days' notice of such meetings
shall be given to all the members, and only such business may be trans-
acted as is specified in the notice.
12. The incidental expenses of the Council shall be met by a fund to be
provided by a pro rata apportionment on the basis of the representation of
each Church in the Council. The expenses of the representatives shall be
paid by their respective Churches. All the expenses involved in the settle-
ment of any difference between the Churches shall be borne equally by the
Churches concerned.
13. When the representatives of one-half of the Churches, at a meeting of
either the Council or its agencies, request a unit vote by Churches upon a
pending motion, the vote shall be so taken.
14. The Federal Council shall have power to make such regulations and
by-laws as shall be deemed necessary for the conduct of its business.
15. After the Federation shall have been constituted, any Church holding
the Reformed Faith and Presbyterian System may be received into the
Federation by a majority of the representatives of the Churches, voting by
the unit rule, and upon its adoption of the articles of federation.
16. Any Church in the Federation may withdraw therefrom on notice
officially given, and on its observance of the same constitutional steps as
were followed in its adoption of these articles.
17. Any amendment to these articles proposed to the Federal Council shall,
before its adoption, be approved by the Council and receive the consent of
two-thirds of the Federated Churches acting in accordance with their respec-
tive constitutions. When the Council shall have been notified of such con-
sent it shall declare the amendment to be a part of the plan of federation.
II. Resolved, That the foregoing articles be printed under the direction of
the Executive Committee, and that copies thereof be supplied as may be
desired to the several committees in the Conference, in order that they may
be further considered by them and by the judicatories which they represent.
III. Resolved, That the several committees request their Supreme Judica-
tories to authorize the continuance of the Conference on this subject, and to
transmit their action to the Executive Committee for consideration by the
Conference.
The Executive Committee which was appointed by the Conference con-
APPENDIX. 1 1 1
sists of the officers of the Conference and the chairmen of the several com-
mittees.
XV. REPORT OP COMMITTEE TO CONSOLIDATE THE EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEES OP EDUCATION FOR THE MINISTRY AND MINIS-
TERIAL RELIEF.
The committee appointed by the General Assembly in session at Mobile,
Ala., to consummate the consolidation of the Executive Committees on Min-
isterial Relief and of Education for the Ministry, met on the call of the
chairman at 8 P. M., July 5 ,1904, in the pastor's office of the Second Presby-
terian church, Louisville, Ky. The following members of the committee
were present: Russell Cecil, J. S. Lyons, Simon Caye. Jr., T. M. Hawes, W. E.
Holt, and C. R. Hemphill, H. B. McClelland being absent.
The committee was convened by the chairman, who offered prayer, and Mr.
Simon Caye, Jr,. was elected secretary. The duty laid upon the committee
by the General Assembly was given most serious consideration, and after a
full discussion action was taken as follows:
Whereas the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United
States, in session at Mobile, Ala., May, 1904, determined upon the consolida-
tion of its Executive Committee on Ministerial Relief, whose office is at
Richmond, Va., and its Executive Committee of Education for the Ministry,
whose office is at Memphis, Tenn., said consolidation to go into effect Septem-
ber 1, 1904, and did constitute and appoint an Executive Committee, to be
known as the Executive Committee of Ministerial Education and Relief,
which should succeed to the rights and duties, and perform the work of the
aforesaid Executive Committees, which committee should consist of the fol-
lowing persons: N. M. Woods, J. S. Lyons, J. W. Tyler, W. H. Miley, John
Stites, C. F. Huhlein, Bennett H. Young, James Quarles, W. H. Marquess,
Edwin Muller, W. C. Nones, G. H. Mourning, and Wade Sheltman, and
whose office should be at Louisville, Ky.; and
Whereas this committee, consisting of Russell Cecil and the other persons
named above, was appointed by the General Assembly to consummate this
consolidation; therefore,
This committee does hereby declare that in its judgment there exists no
sufficient legal or other obstacle to such consolidation, and that this consoli-
tion should be carried into effect in accordance with the action of the Gen-
eral Assembly. It, therefore, requests the persons chosen by the General
Assembly as the Executive Committee of Ministerial Education and Relief
to perfect their organization and to constitute themselves a corporate body,
and to take all the steps necessary for assuming charge of the work com-
mitted to them by the Assembly.
This committee further requests, and by virtue of the authority vested in
it by the General Assembly authorizes and directs the Executive Committee
of Education for the Ministry and the Executive Committee on Ministerial
Relief to convey and transfer all their records and all their moneys and in-
vested funds and all their assets of every kind to their successors, the above
named Executive Committee of Ministerial Education and Relief, as soon as
112
APPENDIX.
said committee shall notify them of their readiness to receive such records
and funds.
And when such conveyance and transfer of records and funds shall have
been made and receipt given for the same, then all responsibility for such
records and funds on the part of the aforesaid Executive Committee of Edu-
cation for the Ministry and on Ministerial Relief shall cease and determine.
Whereas the chairman of the committee appointed by the General Assem-
bly of May, 1904, to consummate the consolidation of the Executive Commit-
tee on Ministerial Relief and the Executive Committee of Education for the
Ministry, has requested that this committee take some appropriate action
officially notifying said Committee on Consolidation that this committee has
been duly organized; now be it
Resolved, That the chairman of this committee be, and he is hereby, in-
structed to notify the said Committee on Consolidation as follows:
1. That the Executive Committee of Ministerial Education and Relief of
the Presbyterian Church in the United States was duly organized on the
8th day of July, 1904, and that thereafter, to-wit, on the 26th day of July,
1904, said committee, by name, was duly incorporated under the laws of the
Commonwealth of Kentucky, and is now existing as a corporation under
said laws.
2. That the following officers of said committee were duly elected, and are
now acting as such — to-wit.: Neander M. Woods, chairman; W. H. Miley,
vice-chairman; James Quarles, recording clerk; John Stites, treasurer; Henry
H. Sweets, secretary.
3. That this committee has opened and is now maintaining an office for
business in the Urban Building, No. 232 Fourth street, Louisville, Ky.
4. That this committee has received from the Executive Committee of
Education for the Ministry, at Memphis, Tenn., the following: The sum of
$13,823.55; minutes book, ledger.
5. That this committee has received from the Executive Committee on
Ministerial Relief, at Richmond, Va., the following: The sum of $25,007.94,
one roll top office desk, one Remington typewriter, No. 7, seven office chairs,
ledger, minute book, miscellaneous pamphlets and stationery.
And be it further resolved, That the notice hereinbefore stipulated con-
sist of a copy of this resolution, duly authenticated by the signature of
Neander M. Woods, chairman, and by the corporate seal of this committee
affixed thereto, and that the same be forwarded by the secretary to Russell
Cecil, chairman of said Committee on Consolidation, at Richmond, Va.
NEANDER M. WOODS, Chairman. (Seal.)
All of which is respectfully submited,
RUSSELL CECIL, Chairman.
XVI. REPORT OF COLUMBIA THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY.
The annual meeting of the Board of Directors of Columbia Theological
Seminary was held May 9-11, 1905. Thirteen members of the Board were
present.
The work of the Seminary has been conducted in a very satisfactory way
APPENDIX.
113
during the year just closed. There have been nineteen students in attend-
ance upon the institution — eleven in the senior class, three in the middle
class, three in the junior class, one post-graduate student and one special
student. There were eight regular graduates to whom diplomas were given.
The reports of the treasurer and the Investing Committee revealed the fact
that the finances of the Seminary are in a healthy condition. The income
from the invested funds has amounted to more than $1,400 above the ex-
penses of the institution. This surplus was placed to the credit of the en-
dowment fund. This fund also received $1,000 from the Twentieth Century
Fund during the last year.
Some improvements have been made on the material property and plans
have been inaugurated to make many improvements during the coming year.
The Board has instructed the Execuutive Committee to sell the professors'
houses which we now have and to build new and better ones on the Semi-
nary grounds, if the way be clear. It is also the purpose of the Board, as
soon as possible, to erect a new chapel and a modern library building.
The Executive Committee has been enlarged and it is now required to hold
regular meetings between the annual sessions of the Board. Plans were
adopted looking to the election of a president of the Seminary. This matter
was referred to the Executive Committee, and the committee was given
power to act on the question.
Drs. Reed and McPheeters offered their resignations as professors in the
Seminary; but the Board refused to accept them and asked these professors
to withdraw them. Dr. McPheeters withdrew his resignation. Dr. Reed felt
that he could not withdraw his, as he had committed himself to the church
in Gastonia, N. C. The Board appointed a committee to appear before this
church and Kings Mountain Presbytery for the purpose of asking them to
release Dr. Reed, so that he may continue as a professor in the Seminary.
As there had been rumors in the air to the effect that the Seminary would
probably be closed for a number of years, though there was no official foun-
dation whatever for these rumors, the Board took decided action touching
this matter. The overwhelming sentiment was that the Seminary must be
kept open. And not only this, but the Board decided to inaugurate an ag-
gressive policy and to put forth every possible effort to build up the institu-
tion. The general impression was that this was the best meeting the Board
had held for years. There was more united effort and there was a deeper
spirit of consecration to the interests of the Seminary than had been mani-
fested in years. Both the Board and the Faculty came away from this
meeting with the firm conviction that there was a bow of decided hopeful-
ness and promise spanning the future of this grand old institution which
has done so much in the past to build up our beloved Zion.
"We again heartily commend this beloved institution to the liberal and cor-
dial support of our people.
Respectfully submitted in behalf of the Board of Directors.
WM. G. NEVILLE, Secretary.
B
114 APPENDIX.
XVII. REPORT OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND TRUSTEES OF
UNION THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY IN VIRGINIA.
The Board of Directors and Trustees of Union Theological Seminary in
Virginia would report to the General Assembly:
1. That the total attendance of students during the session was 60, repre-
senting 21 literary institutions, showing that the decrease of candidates for
the ministry which has been so general and deplorable of late years has not
affected this Seminary as seriously as had been feared.
2. That the policy of electing a president of the Seminary has commended
itself to the Board as wise and timely by the evidence already given of in-
creased interest and enthusiasm under the influence of the wise and ener-
getic work of Rev. Dr. Moore.
3. That the Faculty have faithfully and efficiently done their work under
difficulties that were unusual, owing to the lamented illness of Rev. Dr.
Strickler at the first of the session.
The faithfulness and efficiency of the newly elected young professor of
Hebrew, Rev. J. G. McAllister, deserves special notice, as he satisfactorily
filled the chair of Theology during Professor Strickler's illness.
4. That Rev. Dr. Moore was inaugurated as president, and Rev. J. G.
McAllister as adjunct professor of Hebrew Language and Literature at this
meeting of the Board with very attractive and impressive ceremonies. The
greetings from Princeton, Louisville and Austin Seminaries, and from many
of the leading men of the Church on the occasion of Dr. Moore's inaugura-
tion, were especially gratifying to the Board by reason of their strong and
cordial endorsement of the new departure upon which we have entered in
electing a president.
5. We are glad to report that the finanscial affairs of the Seminary are
steadily improving. The debt on the Building Fund has been very greatly
reduced and there is good prospect of its further reduction, or extinction, in
the near future.
The General Endowment Fund needs to be greatly enlarged to meet the
demand of our growing work, and the Board desires to call the earnest
attention of the Synods of North Carolina and Virginia to this need.
The degree of B. D. was conferred upon the following: Andrew Reid Bird,
Pierre Bernard Hill, William Edwin Hill, Clyde Johnson, Thomas Jasper
McConnell, Harry McClelland Moffett, Charles Henry Pratt, Hervey Leonidas
Ross, Warren Horton Stuart, William Scott Wilhelm; and diplomas were
given the following without the degree of B. D.; Orlando Howard Matthews
and Frederick Dana Viehe. Respectfully submitted,
JOHN S. MUNCE, Secretary.
XVIII. REPORT OF THE DIVINITY SCHOOL OF THE SOUTHWESTERN
PRESBYTERIAN UNIVERSITY, CLARKSVILLE, TENN.
We have had twelve students in the Divinity School this session — four in
the senior class, eight in the junior, and two or three others who have been
taking partial courses.
The following students complete their studies next month: C. E. Allen,
APPENDIX.
115
Presbytery of Tuscaloosa; W. H. Hill, Presbytery of Chickasaw; J. N.
McCord, Presbytery of South Carolina; J. L. McKinstry, Presbytery of Mem-
phis. The first two of these are candidates for the degree of B. D.
The usual courses of study have been conducted, the classes formerly in-
structed by Dr. Fogartie having been taught by Dr. Price and Dr. Webb. It
is hoped that we may soon be able to increase the teaching force, in order
that the professors may be relieved and that the Divinity School may be
more fully equipped. G. W. MACRAE,
President Board of Directors.
XIX. REPORT OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE PRESBYTE-
RIAN THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY OF KENTUCKY.
The Board of Directors of the Theological Seminary of Kentucky presents
its fourth annual report to the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church
in the United States, meeting at Fort Worth, Texas, May 18, 1905:
Officers. — Rev. J. McCluskey Blayney, D. D., president; Rev. J. G. Hunter,
D. D., vice-president; Rev. Wm. Irvine, D. D., secretary; John Stites, Esq.,
treasurer.
Executive Committee — Rev. J. McCluskey Blayney, D. D., Rev. J. G. Hun-
ter, D. D., Rev. William Irvine, D. D., rtev. Peyton H. Hoge, D. D., John
Stites, Esq., H. C. Warren, Esq., Bennett H. Young, Esq., F. C. Nunemacher,
Esq., J. J. Harbison, ii,sq.
Members of the Board as herewith enclosed.
At the annual meeting of the Board held May 2, 1905, the following mem-
bers qualified for the term of four years by taking the oath required by the
Constitution: Rev. S. M. Neel, D. D., Rev. Peyton H. Hoge, D. D., Rev. John
N. Ervin, D. D.
Rev. J. J. Hill, elected by the Synod of Missouri to fill the unexpired term
of Rev. Geo. D. Leyburn, occasioned by his resignation, was duly qualified
by taking the oath of office.
The resignation of Rev. I. S. McElroy, D. D., of the Synod of Kentucky,
U. S., having been received and accepted, the Board unanimously elected
Mr. James R. Barret, of Henderson, Ky., to fill his term of office.
Students — There have been enrolled during the year forty students in the
classes of the Seminary. These young men come from nine States and the
Dominion of Canada, and represent nineteen institutions of learning.
The degree of Bachelor of Divinity has been conferred on eight students —
viz.: R. P. Bayliss, A. B., Tenn.; J. L. Bell, A. M., Tex.; O. L. Byrns, B. L.,
Mo.; R. L. Cowan, A. B., Tenn.; S. R. Crockett, A. B., Ky.; W. P. Neilson,
A. B., Ala.; A. A. Talbot, A. B.,; Ky.; J. G. Venable, A. B.. Ky.
In addition to the regular student work seven ministers of the city and
vicinity have taken work in the post graduate courses offered by the Semi-
nary.
Finances. — The accompanying report of the treasurer of the Seminary
shows the financial condition of the institution:
1 ) 6 APPENDIX.
treasurer's report.
The General Fund of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of
Kentucky is $016,049 66
Scholarships endowed 28,233 33
Making a total of $644,282 99
Invested in —
Seminary buildings, etc $ 70,481 73
Bonds and other investments 572,856 56
Cash uninvested 944 70
$644,282 99
The income from May 1, 1904, to April 1, 1905, was $ 31,909 26
On May 1, 1904, there was an overdraft of $ 6o4 22
The general expenses for the year were 9,696 97
Paid for scholarships 2,168 75
Furnishing new dormitory 1,161 80
Salaries 16,548 52
Cash on hand April 1, 1905 1,679 00
$31,909 26 $31,909 26
This report covers a period of eleven months in order to make the Semi-
nary year conform to the Church year from April 1 of each year to March
31 of the succeeding year. John Stites, Treasurer.
General Statement. — The student body of the past year has been of a high
character. The members of the Faculty bear testimony to their faithful pur-
suit of the work before them, and of their active and helpful participation in
the mission work of the city.
During the year the Seminary was favored by a special course of three lec-
tures delivered by Dr. J. W. Beardslee, of Holland, Michigan, on the "Inter
Biblical Period," which were of interest and value to the students.
Buildings. — Haldeman Hall and Refectory Hall are now in use, having
been dedicated with impressive services October 13, 1904. These buildings
are beautiful, convenient and highly satisfactory. They are lighted with
electricity, heated with steam, and provided liberally with bath rooms and
modern conveniences. The rooms for students are of good size, well lighted
and ventilated and completely furnished with new furniture of uniform char-
acter. The furnishings of the rooms were in most instances provided by
individuals, ladies' societies and churches.
The new Library Building, the corner-stone of which was laid October 28,
1904, is now in process of erection and will soon be ready for use. It is the
central building of the new group and will contain a reception room, a large
room suitable for the ordinary social gathering of the students, a reading
room with reference books, a librarian's room, and a stack room for 32,000
volumes. It is erected by Mr. James R. Barret, of Henderson, Ky., in mem-
ory of his wife, Lucy Stites Barret.
The Board at its annual meeting, May 2, received notice of an additional
APPENDIX. 117
gift of five thousand dollars from Mr. Barret to be used toward the comple-
tion of the Library.
The Board looks forward to the erection of additional buildings in the
near future.
With a rich blessing on the past as a pledge for the coming days, the
directors and faculty hopefully look forward to the opening of the next year's
work. Respectfully submitted,
WM. IRVINE, Secretary.
XX. REPORT OF THE TRUSTEES OF THE AUSTIN PRESBYTERIAN
THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY.
The past year has been marked by peculiar and repeated occasions of
anxiety and sadness, still there have not been wanting manifold evidences
of God's blessing upon this Seminary.
In the death of Mrs. Sarah C. Ball the institution has had to mourn the
loss of its greatest benefactor; in the death of Judge S. P. Greene, the loss
of a most valuable and devoted trustee; and in the death of Dr. R. K. Smoot,
the loss, not only of an honored professor and constant supporter, but one
of its first and firmest friends. During several months the president, Dr.
T. R. Sampson, has had to lay aside active work on account of sickness.
But the work of the Seminary has been carried on without serious inter-
ruption, with thirteen students in attendance — one from Arkansas, one from
Indian Territory, one from Missouri, one from Minnesota, and nine from
Texas. Of this number six have completed the three years' course and have
received the diploma.
The following facts are worthy of note:
(1) All the obligations of the Seminary have been promptly met.
(2) Not one dollar of the Endowment Funds has been used for current
expenses since the institution was opened.
(3) The Student Scholarship Fund has been more than sufficient, each
year, to meet the demands made upon it.
The president, Dr. T. R. Sampson, because unable to do the work which has
devolved upon him for five years, and forbidden by the physician to at-
tempt to continue, was compelled to place his resignation in the hands of
the Board, to take effect June 30th, 1905. His resignation was reluctantly
accepted and Dr. Sampson was appointed to the chair of Church History
and Polity for the next year.
Rev. E. D. Brown was elected to the chair of New Testament Language
and Exegesis.
The necessity and value of this Seminary for the Southwest is demon-
strated, to those who have not felt the force of the arguments in favor of it,
by the fact that this year's graduating class has added as much new mate-
rial to its working force as has been obtained directly from the institutions
east of the Mississippi within the last four years.
Bowing ourselves submissively to the providence which has removed from
us so many of those upon whom we have relied, praying that our God may
118 APPENDIX.
raise up worthy successors to these, and thanking Him for the many evident
manifestations of His favor, we face the future with courage, confidence and
hope. A. G. JONES, Secretary.
XXI. REPORT OF THE WESTERN OR AMERICAN SECTION OF THE
EXECUTIVE COMMISSION OF THE ALLIANCE OF THE REFORMED
CHURCHES HOLDING THE PRESBYTERIAN SYSTEM.
Fathers and Brethren:
The "Western or American Section of the Executive Commission of the
Alliance of the Reformed Churches holding the Presbyterian System, respect-
fully presents to your venerable body its annual report.
The Commission has held during the past ecclesiastical year three meet-
ings, the first at Liverpool, England, on July 5th, 1904; the second at Pitts-
burg, Pa., November 15th and 16th, 1904, and the third at Nashville, Tenn.,
March 28th and 29th, 1905. The meeting at Liverpool was the first meeting
of the Commission as reconstituted by the Eighth General Council of the
Alliance, which met at Liverpool, England, from June 28 to July 5, 1904. The
meeting at Pittsburg was held in the Grace Reformed church, the Rev. John
H. Prugh, D. D., pastor, and had as distinctive features a popular meeting in
that church on Wednesday evening, November 16th, and the generous hos-
pitality of the ladies of the congregation. At the meeting at Nashville, Tenn.,
the members of the Commission were the guests of the Presbyterian churches
of the city, both of the Cumberland Presbyterian and the Southern Presby-
terian denomination. The popular meeting on Wednesday evening, March
28th, was largely attended, and the Presbyterian laymen of the city united
in tendering a banquet to the Alliance on the evening of March 29th. The
meeting as a whole was one of the most satisfactory in the history of the
Alliance.
It gives the Commission great pleasure to report that the Eighth General
Council of the Alliance, held at Liverpool, England, was eminently satisfac-
tory both as to attendance, character of the sessions and general influence.
The city of Liverpool, through the Lord Mayor and the Town Council, ten-
dered to the delegates a most bountiful hospitality, a hospitality which was
rendered yet more acceptable by the many kindnesses of the Presbyterian
and other Christian people of the city. The proceedings of the Council have
been published in a volume at a moderate price and a copy of the same is
herewith submitted to the Assembly.
The following matters are respectfully submitted to you for deliberation
and such action as may be deemed appropriate:
1. Candidates for the Ministry. — The matter of the decrease in the number
of candidates for the ministry has attracted the attention of the Christian
Churches generally in this and other countries. So momentous is this de-
crease, that the Commission felt the duty incumbent upon it to appoint a
committee to consider the entire subject. This committee reported at the
Nashville meeting and the report is herewith submitted with the request
that such action be taken as to your honorable body may seem appropriate.
APPENDIX.
119
2. Evangelization of the Colored People. — The Commission has also given
considerable attention to mission work among the colored population of the
United States. Several of the Churches of this Alliance are engaged in the
work, and it is earnestly urged that measures be taken looking to a larger
co-operation in this important sphere of Christian effort by the several
Churches of the Alliance in the United States.
3. Sabbath School Work. — There is need, in the opinion of the Commis-
sion, for definite instruction of the children and youth of our Churches in the
Presbyterian Doctrine, Government and History. There should also be em-
phasis laid upon the nurture of the children of Christian parents for full
membership in the Church and for holy living. These needs should receive
full and serious attention, for they are vital to the welfare of our Reformed
Churches.
4. Europe. — The needs of the weaker Reformed Churches on the Continent
of Europe are still great, and every effort should be made for their welfare.
The greatest need of that historic Continent is a revival of spiritual reli-
gion. We are glad to state that successful efforts are being made by three
of the American Churches in the establishment of regular Sabbath services
for the American colonies in the principal cities; as, for instance, The Hague,
and at Frankfort.
5. Reformation Anniversaries. — The Liverpool Council took action with a
view to commemorating historic events and persons connected with the
Reformation of the Sixteenth Century as follows: "Attention has been called
to the observance by the Reformed and Lutheran Churches of the European
Continent and elsewhere of the first Sabbath of November as a day of spe-
cial thanksgiving for the blessings resulting to so many Churches and coun-
tries from that great religious revival which we call the Reformation of the
Sixteenth Century.
"Such commemorative thanksgiving exercises are fitted to render most
important service in our own day to the different Reformed and Presbyte-
rian Churches of the world. They would also form another link between the
Churches of the European Continent and those located in other parts of the
world.
"We, therefore, recommend the observance of such Reformation Days by
the different Churches of this Alliance, and would point out that the pres-
ent is a most opportune season for arranging for such commemoration, since
the birth of John Knox occurred in 1505, the death of Theodore Beza, col-
league and successor of Calvin, in 1605, and the birth of Calvin himself
in 1509."
6. Presbyterian Church of Mexico. — The Council received into the Alliance
this latest born of the Presbyterian Churches, and it is recommended that a
fraternal message be sent to its General Synod, through the stated clerk,
Rev. William Wallace, D. D., Saltillo, Mexico. We rejoice in the prosperity
of the work in Mexico, and hope that the near future will see a great ad-
vance in every element of Christian progress.
7. Absentee and Associate Church Members. — A report on these matters
is respectfully submitted for consideration, and if the way be clear for ac-
tion. One of the troublesome problems of the day is that connected with the
120
APPENDIX.
hundreds of thousands of evangelical church members whose names are on
the rolls of congregations located in communities in which they do not now
reside, or who are statedly absent from their homes for long periods of time.
8. Representation and Expenses.— The Council adopted recommendations
on these important matters to which the commission has given and is giv-
ing serious attention, and the results will be submitted in the next annual
report.
9. Apportionment. — It is respectfully requested that provision be made for
the payment of the apportionment of your Church for the annual expenses of
the Alliance. The amount is $480, and should be sent to the treasurer, F. K.
Hippie, LL. D., president Real Estate Trust Company, Philadelphia, Pa.
The Alliance has appointed as a delegate to carry to your venerable body
fraternal greetings the Rev. J. F. Cannon, D. D.
Invoking the blessing of God upon your deliberations, and the outpouring
of His blessing upon you and all your work for Christ, we are, in behalf of
the Western or American Section of the Commission of the Alliance,
Yours fraternally and respectfully,
RALPH EARL PRIME, Chairman.
Wm. H. Robekts, Secretary.
XXII. REPORT OF THE AD-INTERIM COMMITTEE TO PREPARE A
CATECHISM ON THE CHURCH.
Your committee appointed to prepare a catechism on the Church begs leave
to report as follows:
Your committee was created by the Assembly of 1900, but without instruc-
tions as to the character of the work expected to be done by it, whether to
prepare an elementary catechism suited to younger children, or a fuller doc-
trinal exposition of the nature and functions of the Church, adapted to the
intelligence of adults and pitched somewhat on the plane of the shorter
catechism. Your committee prepared and submitted to the ensuing Assem-
bly a first or tentative draft of a catechism. This was ordered printed and
sent out to the Presbyteries for inspection and suggestions as to improve-
ments. Many valuable criticisms were sent to your committee as a result of
such reference, and were carefully embodied by it into a second draft, which
was submitted to the Assembly of 1903. It was suggested in that body that
it be printed by the Committee of Publication and circulated, in order that
by testing it in actual use the Church might ascertain its value, and then
take steps toward perfecting it in the light of such experience. But the fear
was expressed that to do this might seem to involve a larger endorsement
of it in the form it then had than was desirable; that approval even to that
extent might be thought by some as tantamount to making it quasi one of
the doctrinal standards of the Church. The action that Assembly took was
to refer this second draft back to the committee, with the direction that it
continue its work by further revision. But it gave no directions as do the
character of the modifications it deemed desirable. Your comnittee was
unable to hold a meeting during the year that followed becaise of the press-
APPENDIX.
121
ing engagements of some of its members. Nor could it meet this past year
because of other expenditures that consumed the available funds in your
treasury. While impressed with the value of the work sought to be done,
and the need of a manual of catechetical instruction on the theory and polity
of the Church, yet we ask the Assembly to consider whether any further
attempt to prepare such a catechism by the Assembly itself may not be at-
tended with such difficulties as to render it more desirable that such work
be done by private hands. Respectfully submitted,
W. A. ALEXANDER, Chairman.
122
APPENDIX.
PRAYER FOR THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Wkereas the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the '
States fully recognizes the efficiency of the prayers of God's people, and the
necessity of divine guidance in its own deliberations; therefore —
Resolved. 1. That the General Assembly recommend to all the churches
under its care to offer special prayer during the devotions of th
preceding the meeting of the General Assembly in each year, that God would
of His great mercy so give the General Assembly the wisdom that cometh
from above, and so direct all its plans, discussions, and decisions, as to pro-
mote His own glory and to advance the kingdom of Jesus on earth.
Resolved. 2. That the above preamble and resolution be printed annually in
the Appendix to the Minutes of the Assembly.
FORMS OF BEQUEST.
"I give, devise, and bequeath to the Trustees of the General Assembly of
the Presbyterian Church in the United States (here insert the estate
the Presbyterian Church in the United States (incorporated under the laws
of North Carolina) (here insert the estate devised and bequeathed) for the
use and benefit of said Church."
"I give and bequeath to the Trustees of the Presbyterian Committee of Pub-
lication of the Presbyterian Church in the United States ( incorporated under
the laws of the State of Virginia) (here name the amount of the bequest),
to be used for the publication work of said Church, which is popularly known
as the Southern Presbyterian Church."
"I give and bequeath to the Executive Committee of Foreign Missions of
the Presbyterian Church in the United States (incorporated under the laws
of the State of Tennessee) (here name the amount of the bequest), to be
used for the foreign mission work of said Church, which is popularly known
as the Southern Presbyterian Church."
"I hereby give and bequeath to the Executive Committee of Ministerial
Education and Relief of the Presbyterian Church in the United States (in-
corporated under the laws of Kentucky) for the support of aged and disabled
ministers and of the widows and orphans of deceased ministers of said
Church."
THE MINUTES.
The selling price of the Minutes to parties out of our bounds, commercial
houses, etc., is $1; to officers and others within our Church, 50 cents; to
Presbyterial Clubs buying a copy for each church of the Presbytery, and to
clubs of the General Assembly, 25 cents. A copy free of cost will be sent to
each minister on the roll of the Church as shown by the Presbyterial re-
ports. Orders should be sent to the Executive Committee of Publication and
not to the Stated Clerk.
STATISTICAL REPORTS
OF
PRESBYTERIES.
Note. — An asterisk (*) after the name of a church indicates that it owns
a manse. P. is for Pastor; S. S. for Stated Supply; W. C. for Without Charge;
Ev. for Evangelist; Ed. for Editor; D. M. or H. M. for Domestic or Home
Missionary; T. for Teacher; Inf. for Infirm. Other abbreviations will be
readily recognized.
124
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FOREIGN MISSION STATISTICAL TABLE FOR 1904.
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Chukch Statistics.
CO
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XI
CD
72
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0.
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NAME OF STATION,
TOWN OR VILLAGE.
CO
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CO
s
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K
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Congo Mission:
Ibanj
1897
1891
8000
13000
1
3
3
5
12
52
4
38
933
2883
269
546
1500
4000
1
1
300
475
500
1016
$ 80 75
81 00
Total
21000
4
8
64
42
3816
815
5500
2
775)....
1516
161 75
North Brazil:
1882
1895
1882
1895
1895
1903
1894
1873
100000
100000
1000000
500000
340000
700000
400000
190000
34
206
77
460
168
120
132
245
3
68
11
43
24
17
13
13
'iso
'366
'266
250
300
1
1
1
4
2
2
1
2
25
237 00
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
3
1
1
2
1
2
1
3
110 00
70
200
"4
15
"60
916 35
Natal
2
3
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
6
4
2
6
6
420 00
438 83
100
600 00
335 00
180
753 00
Total
3330000
5
10
7
27
11
1442
192
1200
14
575
4
75
3810 18
South Brazil:
1886
1869
1901
1892
1895
1904
1895
136000
70000
....
1
4
6
180
10
1000 00
Sao Joa del Rei
125000
150000
125000
200000
2
1
1
1
7
2
1
2
8
9
2
1
5
1
200
22
27
6
"i6
2
1
175
20
180 00
Total
806000
6
17
17
8
1
222
33
10
3
195
6
190
1180 00
Mid-China:
1867
1895
1895
1000000
350000
500000
3
2
3
1
10
8
10
2
4
12
13
5
11
3
5
4
1
287
46
92
25
6
28
83
16
138
7
1
461
77
"i
4
179
19
4
249 00
44 00
482 00
1892
1872
3
10
5
8
2
122
42
244 00
3
10
145
3
166
33
30 00
Total
1850000
12
46
31
32
7
589
69
382
11
638
5
235
1049 00
North Kiangsu:
1883
1897
1894
1887
5000000
3000000
2000000
1
1
1
15
73
40
80
135
50
50
30
33
24
115 25
80
1
1
153 18
35 00
80
Total
10000000
3
15
193
....
225
2
57
303 43
Cuba:
1902
1899
1902
8000
25000
1
2
4
6
1
1
37
143
8
48
150
350
1
1
100
150
4
121
55 00
4
2
1509 00
Total
33000
3
10
4
2
2
180
56
500
2
250
4
121
1564 00
Japan :
Gifu
1901
1890
1885
1887
1890
1898
1893
1899
1896
1890
100000
280000
700000
1000000
600000
20000
100000
65000
1500000
1
2
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
2
4
5
6
2
4
6
2
2
'"5
11
11
1
1
9
2
10
13
3
4
101
184
536
19S
S
23
4S
Tt
11
9
12
6
3
3
4
8
3
3
9
5
2
1
40
150
25
115
28
100
10
Kobe ..
1
"'2
1
1
1
1
80
5
1
8
3
6
195
14
20
Total
4265000
12
33
35
52
4
3
1181
45
29
653
14
110
Korea:
1892
1896
1896
500000
2000000
1000000
3
2
3
5
4
6
22
4
12
13
14
15
12
S
4
125
194
64
153
33
44
600
500
820
3
S
4
230
300
200
28
47
44
1657 18
1771 00
1945 00
Total
3500000
8
15
38
42
24
38(
230
1920
15
730
....
119
5373 18
Mexico:
1887
1874
1884
1880
70000
60000
20000
50000
2
3
1
1
1
3
8
4
2
34
8
2
6
4
3
1
2
20C
16E
85
71
7
11
....
8
600
500
150
150
3
3
1
1
75
146
70
55
'"3
60
211
70
40
194 55
C Victoria
1348 22
232 80
230 10
Total
200000
2
6
17
50
10
528
26
1400
8
346
3
380
2005 67
193
199
279
52
28
853'
1466
1147
84
4242
38
2803
115447 21
Statistics of Sabbath Schools and Young People's Societies.
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315
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149
205
1147
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718
26
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137
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28
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187
589
814
1254
18
414
525
24
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657
173
82
362
26
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235
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1997
571
184
58
1038 58
406 15
1465
328
424
118
1902
462
383
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7
28
209
13
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4
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30
230
1334
152
789 5S
902
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185
97
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£
135
152
Central Texas
29
274
2396
207
1403 72
1
1376
167
108
67
292
20K
1?
246
337
22
209
1360
116
666| 57
788
311
123
28
165
1415
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37J
347
300
15
217
144
1754
1006
153
116
1019
623
41
27
742
469
580
180
1322
1044
6
10
81
461
98
323
38
34
1051
11
69
503
37
233
18
171
30
13
2(
38
272
15
137
43
19
54
177
505
1335
4603
141
394
894
3004
41
176
" - 2
765
881
161
400
142
327
40
127
132
1125
1210
2689
31
602
473
27
311
2489
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1521
160
1
1871
247
121
13S
393
2771
11
m
207
13
25
88
217
740
1395
65
157
459
838
11
53
270
1061
16
114
15
88
2
54
44
247
344
1564
12
311
790
45
524
3975
408
2491
181
2075
870
275
133
230
3583
50
1289
1940
17
131
1092
88
631
43
699
90
84
63
145
1095
2
4(J
66
21
38
7!
83
231
324
25
521
1365
2683
185
250
883
1803
64
2193
65
135
6
252
1151
597
7
470
314
178
126
69
90
18
184
606
2
527
1846
1468
9
2414
14
16
"43
276
316
876
876
481
295
Ethel
144 13
3898 364
454
138
125
657
21
29
142
284
1016 103
23121 192
671
1177
38
64
596
1365
84
251
43
71
13
53
541
316
1287
2056
4
18
69
428
117
Fort Worth
494
34
277
23691 214
1316
69
729
225
67
71
216
1308
11
170
136
21
21
148
185
11261 79
1501 139
546
836
101
16
245
600
191
114
67
64
9
19
191
217
703
1014
9
184
150
14
24
172
212
1707 102
1467! 158
671
933
61
106
1
873
369
76
114
29
28
7
99
iii
185
1133
782
10
9
192
132
216
King's Mountain..
71
20
28
115
22
38
34
13
43
228
309
1086
175
468
272
162
472
17421 133
1993 259
8275 733
1233 114
3520 362
1608 191
895 129
37231 273
887
1066
4463
664
2113
982
580
2529
24
81
268
33
253
68
30
157
"33
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1002
782
2307
608
1722
1403
513
869
241
222
960
180
525
197
422
128
219
454
122
565
41
101
31
342
116
42
57
72
14
136
262
330
315
818
317
42
1002
2087
1827
4167
1261
3818
1657
1191
1871
10
15
42
50
20
13
5
21
288
341
1166
239
509
277
179
493
337
300
2191
541
1303
266
342
474
22
17
13
328
147
116
26681 261
2265 1 fin
1229
600
442
72
18
23
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1683
783
624
495
196
83
577
483
233
2999
1266
1324
8
12
7
186
270
134
131
1323
1079
89|
374
54
39
277
20
25
176
250
1192
1631
129
206
562
965
39
71
1
1
563
1307
150
900
39
100
18
56
39
590
809
2953
9
9
128
294
88
Mobile
325
14
120
1041
89
581
37
1
308
93
18
12
52
668
4
45
124
V
21
405
536
475
28
362
2982
290
1497
80
2691
483
107
126
527
3934
1217
Norfolk
31
48
413
507
2881
4377
310
372
1055
2626
96
179
19
2209
63
397
231
141
90
98
455
1490
3255
4325
26
41
727
981
1377
North Alabama
927
North Mississippi..
17
141
11 9 8
96
619
5'
483
292
775
4
7K
18
55
22
16
13
22
20
12
490
184
154
131
197
155
111
4350
1335
993
764
1945
990
831
351
109
118
67
143
129
89
2557
700
643
324
1055
683
636
194
66
18
30
96
37
45
48
18
1
1
1
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1438
1028
548
497
985
340
542
991
767
562
766
721
355
152
61
75
148
224
194
83
71
65
25
13
71
1494
73
50
85
83
1
17
66
38
45
13
1009
248
56
179
125
127
140
338
142
172
478
3118
1578
814
778
1404
635
915
1175
1105
955
1304
1725
40
10
7
4
6
10
7
627
167
104
113
146
85
155
374
231
246
36
128
73
Pine Bluff
200
26
37
22
41
135
294 1
187
418
1227
1919
1391
2581
109
193
150
198
661
16
15
8
12
424
335
178
347
2022
1290 50
905 22
1283 801
201
159
349
31
26
93
19
172
84
321
419
282
13
17
16
151
130
222
1561
11«
878
1374
1041
149I
587 14
878 39
6531 70
5481 8
"i
589
833
823
164
132
194
49
35
24
81
51
2
13
8
46
5
211
415
254
50
976
1636
3
16
54
308
138
62
12
576
1074| 117
1223 5
67
671
44
257
4
98
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1568
200
1400 39
1
731
101
120
29
177
1158
9
233
483
Tuscaloosa
281
270
1695
150
757 41
769
280
76
9
862
2084
12
171
495
Upper Missouri
20!
141
276
135
2406
1154
221
96
1525 159
1678
528
2206
14
430
1029
560 1 34
4
640
68
11
24
133
876
4
58
17
Western District. . .
15|
117|
872| 80 1
4811 33
...
420
52 1
191
32
100
623
3
89 1
22
42!
413|
3271! 308| 19151 101|....|
1987|
135|
141|
571
228|
2548| 18 | 4B2I
185
331
R41
1594] 177
10211 52
494
2771
8
39
85
903
S
in
133
West Lexington...
341
841
1856! 195
10461 71
1
808
322
139
40
133
1228
19
196
440
421
411
1
195611
2141
4421
I
19641
28871
1
1 •••
764
1267
591
234
1255
2371
14
16
272
451
202
317
1590] 53
68?
616
15802 1
202
8052 J
1
73
3712 i
378
Total
8587 1 1 4Q»«4 H 51 741 7Q573 1 KiHKJ
64444 \
24383 1 $115979 1
014 5
2865 J
30923
1
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STATISTICS OF WOMEN'S SOCIETIES.
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25
23
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381
588
710
326
172
1,074
574
995
280
187
55
$ 1,579
661
4,228
796
67
5,144
952
948
1,366
540
1
$ 275
213
166
448
102
576
352
186
365
25
2
$ 336
174
1,311
240
496
571
694
673
781
50
1
$ 49
188
124
34
129
748
341
164
60
$ 2,239
1,236
5,829
1,522
794
7,420
2,339
1,971
2,573
615
4
Arkansas
Bethel
Brownwood
Central Mississippi
35
34
797
950
2,231
1,107
199
191
1,060
790
504
970
3,994
3,058
Charleston
Cherokee
Concord
Chickasaw
Columbia
Dallas
26
10
21
12
638
173
411
238
3,063
1,641
991
2,016
657
20
56
63
1,586
36
431
40
574
94
322
5,775
1,697
1,572
2,441
East Alabama
Eastern Texas
24
1,059
283
475
679
2,296
Ethel
Enoree
34
698
899
118
564
1
1,582
Florida
8
214
358
100
221
23
702
Fort Worth
Harmony
8
472
59
86
370
1,238
1,753
Kanawha
12
19
18
33
78
15
381
239
416
659
1,908
293
1,260
312
774
1,546
3,058
1,299
276
19
257
177
1,144
196
269
127
1,005
1,221
2,131
329
375
101
112
148
244
335
2,180
559
2,148
3,092
7,567
2,159
Lafayette
30
17
340
290
765
1,930
81
602
558
550
657
248
2,061
3,464
33
775
1,240
105
724
570
3,258
12
15
207
327
600
256
68
100
600
300
55
53
1,323
709
35
43
862
1,086
3,976
3,801
739
352
1,084
748
727
312
6,526
5,213
10
36
19
7
11
24
10
193
956
414
132
222
298
316
819
1,027
2,092
22
261
1,509
801
47
169
41
18
36
313
94
747
1,323
323
78
352
60
367
106
206
113
654
87
84
28
1,719
2,725
2,569
772
958
1,972
1,280
29
15
571
281
930
839
141
212
721
130
129
22
1,927
1,203
20
380
500
740
1,775
171
3,186
11
21
21
27
8
15
24
21
19
5
37
244
495
469
513
137
333
545
439
608
92
850
221
1,625
1,073
1,994
663
992
1,847
503
925
129
90
181
322
123
48
237
416
395
64
305
793
1,305
227
239
380
288
857
70
376
607
630
13
179
197
28
291
484
2,396
2,654
4,251
1,027
1,458
2,661
1,235
2,462
215
1,443
54
528
153
2,178
1,167
26,304
$71,279
$12,424
$31,788
$15,223
$152,926
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COMPARATIVE SUMMARY.
211
COMPARATIVE SUMMARY OF THE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH FOR THE LAST FIVE YEARS.
1901.
1902.
1903.
1904.
1905.
13
13
13
13
13
79
286
64
1,485
2,991
57
62
207
37
79
291
62
1,501
3,017
54
57
190
31
82
314
52
1,517
3,044
38
47
226
25
82
315
53
1,538
3,082
53
51
201
37
82
322
46
1,557
3,. 29
48
56
197
31
Pastoral Dissolutions
157
183
193
177
151
Ministers received from other de-
8
13
13
7
12
Ministers dismissed to other denomi-
nations
11
8
8
8
4
52
60
68
57
59
Churches dissolved
18
28
38
31
30
Churches received from other de-
nominations
2
3
1
4
1
Churches dismissed to other de-
nominations .
3
9,234
7,876
8,319
9,230
7,887
10,405
1
9,325
8,100
10,489
4
9,502
8,280
11,072
4
Number of Ruling Elders
9,584
Number of Deacons
8,544
Added on Examination
11,110
Added on Certificate. . .
8,753
227,991
l) 289
230,655
10,373
235,142
10,099
2,9,888
10 614
Total Communicants
246,769
Number of Adults Baptized. .
Number of Infants Baptized
3,168
3,624
3,600
3,746
4,197
4,596
4,86S
5,136
4,646
4,877
Number of Baptized Non-Communi-
41,030
42,312
42,006
41,786
39,651
Teachers in S. S. and Bible Classes .
20,001
20,784
20,896
21,166
21,188
Scholars in S. S. and Bible Classes. .
149,567
149,482
155,768
157,620
172,212
CONTRIBUTIONS.
1900.
1901.
1902.
1903.
1904. 1905.
Assembly's Home
Mission
Local Home Missions
Ministerial Relief. .
Foreign Missions. . . .
Education
Publication.
Colored Evangeliza-
tion
$ 26,658
123,016
1^,030
141,597
90,612
7,848
11 ,322
4,803
16,052
805,945
667,268
122,805
$ 26,317
124,872
14,941
134,745
87,553
8,273
11,327
4,789
17,451
814,308
795,5 '0
125,593
$ 31,145
130,469
19,401
131,756
132,521
9,087
12,743
4,767
16,932
820,193
807,383
111,252
$ 28,499
139,590
17,938
153,272
112,113
9,772
11,170
4,845
18,526
875,316
859,637
143,970
$ 32,928
170,163
L'2,8i7
189,052
116,137
10,289
13,609
6,770
21,938
937,730
839,417
133,240
$ 34,607
158,560
22,858
211,570
97,510
12,032
11,959
Presbyterial
Congregational
6,306
18,735
965,468
885,626
148,867
Total
$2,032,936
$2,165,689
$2,227,549
$2,227,649
$2,494,110
$2,564,095
212
PRESBYTERIAL ASSESSMENTS.
PKESBYTEKIAL ASSESSMENTS.
Due Apeil 1, 1906.
$ 35 42 Maryland
Abingdon $
Albemarle 24 68
Arkansas 18 95
Asheville 15 94
Atbens 19 92
Atlanta 69 76
Augusta 19 26
Bethel 58 23
Brazos 26 96
Brownwood 9 85
Central Mississippi 39 74
Central Texas 28 65
Charleston 25 21
Cherokee 25 40
Chesapeake 16 70
Concord 69 04
Chickasaw 12 32
Columbia 21 22
Dallas 38 41
Durant 5 66
East Alabama 34 83
Eastern Texas 17 39
East Hanover 59 48
Ebenezer 34 31
Enoree 45 20
Fayetteville 82 55
Florida 17 60
Fort Worth 33 77
Greenbrier 28 51
Harmony 25 08
Holston 27 72
Indian 5 47
Kanawha 19 74
King's Mountain 25 35
Knoxville 25 40
Lafayette 27 65
Lexington 105 66
Louisiana 15 68
Louisville 58 95
Macon 28 18
Mecklenburg
Memphis
Meridian
Mississippi
Missouri
Mobile
Montgomery ....
Muhlenburg
Nashville
New Orleans
Norfolk
North Alabama . .
North Mississippi
Orange
Ouachita
Paducah
Palmyra
Paris
Pee Dee
Pine Bluff
Potosi
Red River
Roanoke
Savannah
South Carolina...
St. Johns
St. Louis
Suwanee
Tombeckbee
Transylvania
Tuscaloosa
Upper Missouri .
Washbourne
Western District
Western Texas . .
West Hanover . .
West Lexington .
Wilmington
Winchester
17 22
69 53
40 27
29 27
18 13
23 64
20 45
53 16
16 16
57 65
38 06
33 37
55 08
19 21
62 03
20 65
18 50
14 99
27 52
17 71
14 62
14 70
16 96
30 72
17 74
44 80
15 22
19 60
17 27
15 36
31 14
34 62
29 97
11 63
18 58
33 58
21 67
40 90
38 45
39 44
The above assessment is calculated on the basis of one cent per communi-
cant, as shown by the statistics of Presbyteries published elsewhere in
these minutes. — By order of the Assembly of 1896.
W. A. Alexandeb, Treasurer.
PLACES AND TIMES OF SYNODICAL MEETINGS 213
Places and Times of Synodical Meetings for 1905.
Alabama Montgomery, November 14th, 7:30 P. M.
Arkansas Arkadelphia, October 17th, 8 P. M.
Florida Palatka, November 14th, 7:30 P. M.
Georgia Griffin, November 7th, 7 : 30 P. M.
Kentucky Louisville, October 17th, 7:30 P. M.
Louisiana Monroe, November 21st, 7:30 P. M.
Mississippi Port Gibson, November 21st, 7:30 P. M.
Missouri Marshall, October 31st, 7:30 P. M.
North Carolina Red Springs, October 24th, 11 A. M.
South Carolina Rock Hill, October 17th, 8 P. M.
Tennessee Shelby ville, October 10th, 7 : 30 P. M.
Texas Houston, October 11th, 7 : 30 P. M.
Virginia Richmond, October 26th, 8 P. M.
Collections as Ordered by the General Assembly.
Causes. Months.
Foreign Missions May, October.
Treasurer, S. H. Chester, Box 457, Nashville, Tenn.
Assembly's Home Missions January, September.
Treasurer, W. A. Powell, Drawer H, Atlanta, Ga.
Local Home Missions February, June, August.
Remit to Synodical or Presbyterial Treasurer.
Colored Evangelization December.
Treasurer, Dr. John Little, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Ministerial Relief July.
Treasurer, John Stites, 210 Fifth St., Louisville, Ky.
Ministerial Education April, November.
Treasurer, John Stites, 210 Fifth St., Louisville, Ky.
Publication and Colportage March.
Treasurer, R. E. Magill, Box 883, Richmond, Va.
Bible Cause Third Sabbath in October.
Wm. Foulke, Treasurer, Box B, Station D, New York, N. Y.
The Assembly's Home and School, in Churches and Sunday-
Schools Last Sabbath in December.
Treasurer, S. W. Somerville, Fredericksburg, Va.
Indian Schools and Evangelization — Every fifth Sabbath (in Sabbath-
Schools and Y. P. Societies). Remit to W. A. Powell, Treasurer,
Drawer H, Atlanta, Ga.
Special Collection in Sabbath-Schools for Support of S. S.
Missions First Sabbath in October.
R. E. Magill, Treasurer, Box 883, Richmond, Va.
214
MINISTERIAL OBITUARY.
MINISTERIAL OBITUARY.
Tlie presbyterial reports make mention of the death of the follow-
ing ministers during the ecclesiastical year :
J. L. Barnes Presbytery of Central Mississippi.
S. R. Brush " Palmyra.
0. B. Caldwell " Dallas.
J. C. Coldwell " Florida.
J. G. Cunningham " Brazos.
J. D. Dean " Tuscaloosa.
James Douglas Bethel.
A. Enloe " Cherokee.
H. G. Griswold " Macon.
J. M. Kimmons " Chickasaw.
F. O. Koelle " New Orleans.
G. W. Lawson " Albemarle.
J. A. LeFevre, D. D " Maryland.
S. M. Luckett, D. D " "Western Texas.
D. McDuffie " Pee Dee.
M. McGillivray " East Alabama.
M. J. McLean " Tombeckbee.
E. P. Palmer, D. D " Lexington.
W. K. Patterson, D. D " Louisville.
M. F. Pilson " Lexington.
P. B. Price " East Hanover.
R. K. Smoot, D. D " Central Texas.
Colin Stokes " Montgomery.
J. W. W'allace " Lafayette.
E. D. Washburn. D. D " Winchester.
L. L. Wells " Ethel.
H. C. Wilson " Indian.
James Wilson " Brazos.
W. H. W T ilson " King's Mountain.
W. A. Wynne " Paris.
J. H. Zively. D. D " Fort Worth.
Special Days Appointed by the General Assembly.
Prayer for Youth in Colleges axd Seminaries. Last Thursday in February,
annually.
Prayer for Youth ix Purlic Schools. Second Sunday in September, annually.
Chfldrex's Day for Home Missions Last Sabbath in March.
Chlldren"s Day for Foreign Missions Last Sabbath in May.
Sabbath School Day First Sabbath in October.
Thanksgiving for Reformation of Sixteenth Century.
First Sabbath in November.
Special Prayer for Youth, and Presenting Claims of Ministry.
Second Sabbath in November.
SUCCESSION OF MODERATORS.
215
SUCCESSION OF MODERATORS.
A. D. NAMES
1861. Rev. Benj. M. Palmer, D. D.*. .
1862. Rev. J. L. Kirkpatrick, D. D.*.
1863. Rev. James A. Lyon, D. D.*. . .
1864. Rev. John S. Wilson, D. D.*. ..
1865. Rev. George Howe, D. D.*
1866. Rev. Andrew Hart Kerr, D. D.*
1867. Rev. Thos. Vernor Moore, D. D.
1868. Rev. John N. Waddell, D. D.*.
1869. Rev. Stuart Robinson, D. D.*.
1870. Rev. Robert L. Dabney, D. D.*.
1871. Rev. Wm. S. Plumer, D. D.*. . .
1872. Rev. Thomas R. Welch, D. D.*.
1873. Rev. Henry Martyn Smith, D. D
1874. Rev. John L. Girardeau, D. D.*
1875. Rev. Moses D. Hoge, D. D
1876. Rev. Benjamin M. Smith, D. D
1877. Rev. C. A. Stillman, D. D.*
1878. Rev. T. E. Peck, D. D.*. . .
1879. Rev. Joseph R. Wilson, D. D
1880. Rev. T. A. Hoyt, D. D.*. .
1881. Rev. Robert P. Farris, D. D
1882. Rev. R. K. Smoot, D. D.*.
1883. Rev. T. Pryor, D. D.*
1884. Rev. T. D. Witherspoon, D. D.
1885. Rev. H. R. Raymond, D. D
1886. Rev. J. H. Bryson, D. D.*. .
1887. Rev. G. B. Strickler, D. D. .
1888. Rev. J. J. Bullock, D. D.*. .
1889. Rev. H. G. Hill, D. D
1890. Rev. James Park, D. D
1891. Rev. Hampden C. Du Bose, D.
1892. Rev. Samuel A. King, D. D
1893. Hon. J. W. Lapsley*
1894. Rev. James R. Graham, D. D
1895. Rev. C. R. Hemphill, D. D.
1896. Rev. R. Q. Mallard, D. D.*
1897. Rev. George T. Goetchius, D
1898. Rev. E. M. Green, D. D. . .
1899. Rev. John F. Cannon, D. D
1900. Hon. Joseph W. Martin, LL. D
1901. Rev. Neander M. Woods, D. D
1902. Rev. William T. Hall, D. D. . .
1903. Rev. Abner C. Hopkins, D
1904. Rev. S. M. Neel, D. D
1905. Rev. J. T. Plunket, D. D
D
PRESBYTERY. PLACE OF ASSEMBL7
, . New Orleans Augusta.
. Concord Montgomery.
. Tombeckbee Columbia.
. Flint River Charlotte.
. Charleston Macon.
. Memphis Memphis.
. East Hanover. . . . Nashville.
. Chickasaw Baltimore.
. Louisville Mobile.
.West Hanover. . . Louisville.
. Harmony Huntsville.
. Arkansas Richmond.
. New Orleans Little Rock.
. Charleston Columbus.
. East Hanover. ... St. Louis.
. West Hanover. . . .Savannah.
. Tuscaloosa New Orleans.
. Roanoke Knoxville.
. Wilmington Louisville.
. Nashville Charleston.
. St. Louis Staunton.
. Central Texas. . . .Atlanta.
. East Hanover. . . .Lexington, Ky.
. Louisville Vicksburg.
. Tuscaloosa Houston.
. North Alabama . . Augusta.
. Atlanta St. Louis.
. Maryland Baltimore.
. Fayetteville Chattanooga.
. Knoxville. Asheville.
. Pee Dee Birmingham.
. Central Texas. . . .Hot Springs.
. North Alabama. . .Macon.
. Winchester Nashville.
. Louisville Dallas.
. New Orleans Memphis.
. Cherokee Charlotte.
. Transylvania, . . . .New Orleans.
. St. Louis Richmond.
. Arkansas Atlanta.
. Memphis Little Rock.
. Bethel Jackson.
. Winchester Lexington, Va.
.Upper Missouri. . Mobile.
. Augusta Ft. Worth.
*Deceased.
216 STATED CLERKS OF PRESBYTERIES.
STATED CLERKS OF PRESBYTERIES
ARE REQUESTED :
1. To make their Annual Reports to the Assembly, viz: (1) Statis-
tical, as per form on preceding pages ; (2) on Systematic Beneficence ;
(3) on Sabbath Schools; (4) Narratives; (5) on Young People's and
Women's Societies.
2. To make their reports in fair, distinct writing, especially the col-
umns of names and figures in the Statistical Tables.
3. To make them as accurate and as full as possible. When
churches do not report to Presbyteries, it is desirable that the numbers
of their communicants should be inserted from their last reports.
4. To report so fractions in the money columns.
5. To add up each column of figures with special care.
6. To append to the statistics of Presbyteries a brief account of the
changes which have occurred during the year, such as the number of
licensures, ordinations, installations, dissolution of pastorates, organi-
zation and dissolution of churches, and the names of ministers de-
ceased. Place a star after name of church if a manse is furnished.
7. To transmit their Statistical and other Reports to the Staled
Clerk of the Assembly as soon as they are prepared ; if possible, be-
fore the meeting of the Assembly. If statistical reports are not re-
ceived before the Assembly adjourns, it will occasion embarrassing
delay in the publication of the Minutes. Clerks should also see that
the amounts due for General Assembly's assessments are promptly
sent up.
Blank forms for Sessional or Presbyterial Reports arc not fur-
nished by the Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, but by the Ex-
ecutive Committee of Publication, at cost price, by order of the As-
semblies of 1867 and 1878 ; and Stated Clerks are earnestly urged to
supply themselves with the latest blanks for Statistical Reports. Get
new blanks each year, and thereby avoid confusion.
The Assembly instructs Stated Clerks to send up no overture, ex-
cept when it is written upon a separate sheet of its own.
Notify the Stated Clerk of General Assembly when a change is
made in the clerkship of your Presbytery.
TO THE STATED CLERKS OF SYNODS.
It is the duty of these officers promptly to notify the approaching
General Assembly, through its Stated Clerk (1) of the formation or
dissolution of Presbyteries within the bounds of their respective
Synods, and (2) by the 1st of May in each year, of the times and
places of the next ensuing meetings of these bodies. It is not re-
quired that Synodical Narratives or statistical reports prepared by
Synod be sent to the Assembly. They are simply for Synodical re-
cord. Notify the Stated Clerk of the Assembly when change is made
in the clerkship of Synod.
ALPHABETICAL LIST
OF
MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES
EMBRACED IN THE PRECEDING PAGES.
ALPHABETICAL LIST
OF
Ministers and Licentiates.
Abbott, E. F., Booneville, Mo., 153.
Abbott, J. E., Marshall, Mo., 153.
Abraham, Roy N., Jefferson, Ga., 134.
Adams, D. D., Robt., Laurens, S. C, 170.
Ahrenbeck, W. T., Cuero, Texas, 189.
Akers, Wm. W., Memphis, Tenn., 177.
Alexander, J. H., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Alexander, D. D., J. H., Kosciusko, Miss.,
147.
Alexander, R. W., Tarboro, N. C, 158.
Alexander, D. D., S. C, Pine Bluff, Ark., 131.
Alexander, D. D., W. A., Clarksville, Tenn.,
147.
Alexander, W. C, Memphis, Tenn., 177.
Alexander, D. D., W. McF., New Orleans,
La., 145.
Allen, A. S., Mt. Pleasant, Tenn., 175.
Allen, F. L., Brick Church, Tenn., 175.
Allen, F. M., Mocksville, N. C, 160.
Allen, J. W., Booneville, Miss., 149.
Allison, D. D., J. Y., Lake Charles, La., 145.
Allison, T. J., Charlotte, N. C, 163.
Allmond, M. B., Hampden-Sidney, Va., 141.
Alston, R. H., New Orleans, La., 155.
Altfather, C. L., Staunton, Va., 196.
Amis, E. H., St. Matthews, Ky., 140.
Anderson, B. R., Milton, Fla., 132.
Anderson, C. C, Sweetwater, Texas, 186.
Anderson, D. D., I. S., Rose Hill, Va., 190.
Anderson, D. D., J. G., Tampa, Fla., 133.
Anderson, W. R., Louisville, Ky., 141.
Anderson, J. P., Greensboro, Ala., 128.
Anderson, D. D., N. L., Montgomery, Ala.,
124.
Anderson, R. C, Shelbyville, Tenn., 177.
Anderson, D. D., W. M., Nashville, Tenn.,
177.
Anderson, Yv\ R., Louisville, Ky., 141.
Arbuthnot, D. D., J. S., Nashville, Tenn., 177.
Archer, S., Greenville, Miss., 147.
Armentrout, D. M., Richlands, W. Va., 194.
Arrowood, M. C, Berrington, N. C, 165.
Arrowood, R. S., Hemp, N. C, 162.
Arrowood, W. B., Clover, S. C, 168.
Arthur, H. C, New Iberia, La., 146.
Arthur, James, Chatham, Va., 200.
Atkins, A. H., Lowryville, S. C, 168.
Atkinson, D. D., C. M., Centreville, La., 146.
Atkinson, Geo. H., Monroe, N. C, 164.
Atwood, J. W., Attalla, Ala., 127.
Auld, I. MeQ., Dade City., Fla., 133.
Austin, H., Jr., Weatherford, Tex., 186.
Avila, Reynoldo, Gonzalez, Texas, 189.
Bachman, J. L., Sweetwater, Tenn., 176.
Bachman, D. D., J. W., Chattanooga, Tenn.,
176.
Bacon, Silas L., Hugo, I. T., 187.
Bagby, F. E., Luther's Store, Ala., 128.
Bailey, Edward, Burnet, Texas, 181.
Bailey, E. C, Timmonsville, S. C, 172.
Bailey, Jr., J. C, Scarboro, S. C, 171.
Bailey, Wm. L., Waynesboro, Va., 195.
Baird, J. S., Bridgeport, Texas, 186.
Baird, R. P., Fortaleza, Brazil, 137.
Baker, A. E., Lumberton, N. C, 162.
Baker, B. L., Monticello, Fla., 132.
Baker, R. Q., Argyle, Fla., 132.
Baker, W. E., Roswell, Ga., 137.
Baker, W. S., Big Springs. Texas, 186.
Baldwin, G. W., Newton, Miss., 149.
Ballou, J. E., Craigsville, Va., 195.
Banks, F. L., Mansfield, La., 146.
Barbee, Thos. M., Palmyra, Mo., 155.
Barber, W. L., Waverly, Mo., 153.
Barbour, D. D., L. G., Louisville, Ky., 142.
Barclay, T. P., Wytheville, Va., 190.
Barkley, A. H., Crawford, Miss., 153.
Barks, Horace B., Centralia, Mo., 154.
Barnes, F. A., Cotulla, Texas, 189.
Barr, D. L., Pontotoc, Miss., 149.
Barr, John C, New Orleans, La., 145.
Barr, D. D., J. C, Charleston, W. Va., 194.
Barrell, C. M., Buckingham, Va., 201.
Barret, D. D., T. C, Richmond, Mo., 157.
Barron, L. W., Durant, I. T., 184.
Barron, F. H., Elkins, W. Va., 195.
Barth, Carl, Camden, S. C, 171.
Battle, Junius M., Gainesville, Ala., 128.
Bayless, Robt., Jonesboro, Tenn., 176.
Beale, Weisel, Laddonia, Mo., 155.
Beall, B. L., Greensboro, N. C, 159.
Bean, D. D., W. S., Clinton, S. C, 170.
Beatie, A. Y., Springfield, Mo., 153.
Beatie, J. L., Hillsville, Va., 190.
Beattie, D. D., F. R., Louisville, Ky., 143.
Beattie, R. J., Kosciusko, Miss., 148.
Beattie, W. E., Lee's Summit, Mo., 153.
Bedinger, B. F., Hampden-Sidney, Va., 200.
Bedinger, D. D., E. W., Anchorage, Ky., 126.
Bedinger, W. L., Williamsburg, W. Va., 193.
Belk, G. W., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Bell, B. C, St. Charles, Mo., 156.
Bell, Dugald, Rich Patch, Va., 198.
Bell, Eugene, Mokpo, Korea, 140.
Bell, G. F., Greenville, Ky., 141, 142.
Bell, R. L., Union Springs, Ala., 124.
Bellot, J. H., Jefferson, Texas, 188.
Benjamin, E. W., Vicksburg, Miss., 149.
Benn, R. L., Trenton, Tenn., 179.
Berry, J. A., Gordo, Ala., 128.
Berryhill, C. Z., Durant. Miss., 147.
Berryhill, J. E., Clarksdale. Miss., 152.
Best, T. R., Selma, Ala., 128.
Bigger, E. E., Mexia, Texas, 182.
Bingham, W. B., Mount Olive, Miss., 150.
Bingham, E. C, Argenta, Ark., 129.
Bishop, C. E., Williamsburg, Va., 198.
Bishop, S. E., Cheraw, S. C, 172.
Bittinger, J. B., Rich Valley, Va., 190.
Bittinger, M. H., Greenville, W. Va., 193.
Bitzer, Geo. L., Corsicana, Texas, 181.
Black, J. A., Due West, S. C, 190.
Black, J. S., Duke, N. C, 161.
Black, Malcolm, Sterling City, Texas, 181.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
219
Black, Wm., Davidson, N. C, 163.
Blackburn, G. A., Columbia, S. C, 169.
Blackburn, J. N., Houma, La., 146.
Blackwell, D. J., Gainesville, Ga., 134.
Blain, D. D., Daniel, Covesville, Va., 200.
Blain, J. Mercer, Sinchang, China, 192.
Blanton, D. D., L. H., Danville, Ky., 143.
Boggs, S. D., Catlettsburg, Ky., 139.
Boggs, D. D., W. E., Jacksonville, Fla., 133.
Boggs, W. L., Greenville, S. C, 170.
Booker, J. E., Lexington, Va., 195.
Booth, G. D., Monroe, La., 146.
Boozer, T. F., Gaffney, S. C, 163.
Boppell, C. J., Bellington, W. Va., 195.
Borthwick, H. R., Max Meadows, Va., 190.
Boude, D. D., H. B., Pleasant Hill, Mo., 153.
Bourne, G. T., Euharlee, Ga., 137.
Bowen, L. P., Marshall, Mo., 147.
Bowling, J. L., Mart, Texas, 182.
Boyce, S. C., Monroe, N. C, 163.
Boyd, R. W., Barium Springs, X. C, 159.
Boyer, J. T., St. Louis, Mo., 156.
Boyles, C. B., Charleston, Miss., 162.
Bradley, E. P., Williarnsboro, X. C, 157.
Bradley, H. C, 156.
Bradley, James, Cross Hill, S. C, 171.
Bradley, Robt., Sardinia, S. C, 171.
Bradshaw, F. A., Blountville, Tenn., 175.
Bradshaw, E. X., Houston, Texas, 180.
Bradshaw, H. S., Xew Bern, X. C, 157.
Brainard, E. S., Poplarville, Miss., 150.
Branch, C. H. H., Lexington, Ky., 144.
Branch, J. B., Clinton, S. C, 171.
Brannen, D. W., Milledgeville, Ga., 136.
Brantly, E., Antlers, I. T., 184.
Brearlev, H. M.. St. Charles, S. C, 172.
Bridewell, D. D., C. P., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Bridges, D. D., J. R., Charlotte, X. C. 164.
Brimm, D. D. ( D. J., Rock Hill, S. C, 169.
Brimm, D. D., V. W., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Briol, P. Ph., Xew Orleans, La., 146.
Briscoe, J. P., Bristol, Tenn., 176.
Britt, M. C, Sparta, Ga., 136.
Brooke, D. D., F. J., Alexandria, Va., 191.
Brown, C. C, Horse Shoe, X. C, 15S.
Brown, C. G., Chester, S. C, 168.
Brown, E. D., Huntersville, X. C, 164.
Brown, E. D., Austin, Texas, 181.
Brown, G. L., Penn Laird, Va., 195.
Brown, D. D., Hugh A., Saxe. Va., 199.
Brown, H. C, Penicks, Va., 197, 198.
Brown, J. C, Lewisburg, W. Va., 193.
Brown, J. D. A., Aberdeen, X. C, 162.
Brown, J. E., Johnson City, Tenn., 173.
Brown, J. J., Fort Lawn, S. C, 168.
Brown, J. W., Baltimore, Md., 196.
Brown, L. W., Abbeville, S. C, 174.
Brown, Morrison, Goodman, Miss., 148.
Brown, P. F., Jacksonville, Fla., 133.
Brown, R. A., Waycross, Ga., 139.
Brown, Robt. S.. Cape Girardeau, Mo., 156.
Brown, S. W., Ruston, La., 146.
Brown, W. C, Loray, X. C, 159.
Brown, Willis, Filmore, I. T., 187.
Browne, A. Oscar, Texarkana, Texas, 181.
Brownlee, H. H., Port Gibson, Miss., 151.
Brownlee, J. L., Livingston, Ala., 12S.
Bruce, Peter, Spring Hill, Tenn., 174.
Bruce, W. W., Perryville, Ky., 143.
Brush, S. R., Paris, Mo., 161.
Bryan, J. A., Birmingham, Ala., 126.
Buchanan, W. C, Takamatsu, Japan, 161.
Buchanan, W. McS., Takamatsu, Japan, 192.
Buck J T 157
Buckner, D.' D., A. G., Glasgow, Va., 198.
Bull, G. W., Xashville, Tenn., 177.
Bull, W. F., Kunsan, Korea, 198.
Burgess, T. P., Edgefield, S. C, 173.
Burkhead, W. D., Grottoes. Va., 195.
Burney, P. H., Gatesville, Texas, 182.
Burwell, H. W., Xew Orleans, La., 145.
Burwell. R. S.. Summerville, Ga., 137.
Buttolph, D. D., D. L., Marietta, Ga., 137.
Byers, D. O., Xorwood, La., 151.
Byrd, S. C, Winnsboro, S. C, 168.
Byrus, O. L., Fulton, Ky., 155.
Cahill, J. A., Port Arthur, Texas 185.
Caldwell, A. S., Barium Springs, X. C, 160.
Caldwell, C. X.. Hangchow, China, 140.
Caldwell, C. T., Waco, Texas, 181.
Caldwell, J. W., Xew Orleans, La., 14a.
Caldwell, R. M., Mcoreneld, Ky., 139.
Caldwell, S. C, Waterboro, S. C, 169.
Caldwell, D. D., S. C, Hazlehurst, Miss., 151.
Caldwell, Wm., Fort Worth, Texas, 186.
Caldwell, W. J., Honey Grove, Texas, 187.
Caldwell, W. L., Memphis, Tenn., 177.
Caligan, J. A., Red Springs, X. C, 162.
Campbell, C. A., Waynesville, X. C, 159.
Campbell, C. X., Charleston, W. Va., 201.
Campbell, H. C. V., Salem, Va., 197.
Campbell, Isaac X., Marshall, Va., 191.
Campbell, J. M., Platte City, Mo., 157.
Campbell, K. A., Austell, Ga., 135.
Campbell, Xed B., Balham, Va., 192.
Campbell, R. D., Laredo, Texas, 189.
Campbell, D. D., R. F., Asheville, X. C, 15S.
Campbell, R. L., Laurel, Miss., 150.
Campbell, D. D., S. B., Dallas, Texas, 182.
Campbell, D. D., W. C, Roanoke City, Va.,
197.
Campbell, W. S., Richmond. Va., 192.
Cannon. D. D., J. F., St. Louis, Mo.. 156.
Carmichael, R. D., Hartselle, Ala,. 127.
Carothers, J. C, Grenada, Miss., 152.
Carpenter, J. B., Lawson, Mo., 157.
Carr, D. D., A. F.. Mobile, Ala., 125.
Carrington, A. B., Greenwich, Va., 192.
Carson, C. C, Valdosta, Ga., 139.
Carson, J. C, Fulton, Mo., 155.
Carson, R. D., Ben, Va., 195.
Carson, W. W., Reliance, Va., 202.
Carter, D. D., W. A.,- Columbus, Ga., 13S.
Carledge, J. L., Clarksboro, Ga., 134.
Carledge, S. J., Anderson, S. C, 172.
Carledge, T. D., Athens, Ga., 134.
Cash, J. S., DeQueen, Ark., 130.
Cassadv, H. H., Morganton, X. C, 161.
Cathey, S. L., Rutherfordton, X. C, 163.
Cave, D. D., W. E., Paducah, Ky., 142.
Cavitt. C. V., St. Joseph, La., 147.
Cecil, D. D., Russell. Richmond, Va., 192.
Chambers, C. W., Kiani, Texas, 1S5.
Champney, I. C. H., Montgomery. Ala., 124.
Chandler, G. T., Rochelle, Ga.. 157.
Chandler, S. E., Brownwood, Texas, 190.
Chaney, D. D., J. M., Independence, Mo., 153.
Charles, D. D., B. H., St. Louis, Mo., 157.
I Charlton, F. T., Sherman, Texas, 1S3.
Cheatham, A. J., Fordyee, Ark., 131.
I Chester, D. D., S. H., Xashville. Tenn., 177.
Chevalier, W. P., Louisville, Ky., 141.
< Chinn, Wm., Warrenton, Va., 192.
| Chisolm, D. D., J. J., Xatchez, Miss., 151.
I Chisolm, Harvey, Pontotoc, Miss., 149.
Christian, C. G.. Livingston, Texas, 185.
Clark, Ryron, Mt. Washington, Md., 197.
Clark, J. M., Morristown, Tenn., 175.
Clark, Melton, Florence. S. C, 172.
Clark, P. C, Bluefield. W. Va., 197.
Clark, D. D.. W. C, Louisville, Ky., 139.
Clegg, I. X., Plantersville. Miss.. 149, 153.
Cleland, F. B., McAfee, Ky., 143.
Cleveland, D. D., T. P., Atlanta. Ga., 135.
Cleveland. W. A., Cartersville, Ga., 137.
Clifford, D. D., B. G., Union, S. C, 170.
Clcpfelter, J. A., Conyers, Ga., 135.
Clothier, G. E., 179.
Clyce, D. D., T. S., Sherman, Texas, 183.
Clvmer, J. M.. Ashburn. Va., 191.
Cobb, J. W., Morrillton. Ark., 131.
Cobb, Luther V.. Caledonia, Mo., 156.
Coble, C. P., Claussen. S. C, 172.
Cochran, J. B., Lowell. X. C. 163.
Cochran, J. M.. Rnvse City. T»x?=, 181.
Cochrane. D. D., W. O., Bristol, Tenn., 175.
Cochrane, W. S.. Bolivar, Tenn.. 177.
220 ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
Cockerharn, H. L., Wilmore, Ky., 144.
Coit, A. B., Enterprise, Miss., 150.
Coleman, J. M., Columbus, Miss., 124.
Collins, Lewis, Nashville, Tenn., 177.
Colmery, C. P., Edwards, Miss., 147.
Colmery, J. S., Vaiden, Miss., 148.
Converse, D. D. ( F. B., Louisville, Ky., 140.
Converse, J. B., Morristown, Tenn., 176.
Converse, D. D., T. E., Atlanta, Ga., 136.
Cook, Geo. L., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Cook Jas. E., Clifton Forge, Va., 198.
Cook, W. A., Parkville, Mo., 157.
Cooke, J. R., Pine View, Va., 192.
Cooper, W. B., Umatillo, Fla., 133.
Coppedge, W. R., Rockingham, N. C, 161.
Corneilson, Geo. H., Concord, N. C, 160.
Covington, G. W., Hanava, Ala., 124.
Cowan, B. M., Colliersville, Tenn., 177.
Cowan, J. C, Nashville, Tenn., 177.
Cowan, D. D., J. F., Fulton, Mo., 154.
Craig, A. A., Montrose, Miss., 150.
Craig, D. I., Reidsville, N. C, 165.
Craig, E. M., Dothan, Ala., 124.
Craig, Thos. B., Fountain Inn., S. C, 170.
Crane, A. J., Newell, N. C, 164.
Crawford, A. W., Hereford, Texas, 183.
Crawford, W. A., Kernstown, Va., 201.
Creighton, J. A., Ladonia, Texas, 188.
Croker, T. C, Columbus, N. C, 163.
Crooks, Chas. G., Danville, Ky., 143.
Crowe, Wm, Jr., Frankfort, Ky., 140.
Crowley, J. S., Wilmington, N. C, 167.
Crozier, D. D., R. H., Palestine, Texas, 184.
Culbertson, R. W., Mebane, N. C, 165.
Cumming, Calvin K., Gifu, Japan, 198.
Cumming, Wm., Winchester, Ky., 144.
Cummins, D. D., T., Henderson, Ky., 142.
Cumpsten, H. J., Learned, Miss., 148.
Cunningham, A. F., Belton, Texas, 182.
Cunningham, D. D., C. E., Yazoo City, Miss.,
147.
Currie, A., Hampden-Sidney, Va., 165.
Currie, C. B., Brevard, N. C, 159.
Currie, D. J., Dublin, Va., 190.
Currie, E. J., Hattiesburg, Miss., 150.
Currie, W. P. M., Wallace, N. C, 167.
Currie, U. B., Shreveport, La., 146.
Curry, D. D., A. B., Memphis, Tenn., 177.
Curtis, Josiah F., Moundsville, W. Va., 156.
Curtis, L. W., Southport, N. C, 167.
Cushman, H. C, Pensacola, Fla., 132.
Dabney, W. A., Smithfield, Va., 196.
Damn, R. D., Lavras, Brazil, 132.
Daniel, D. D., Eugene, Lewisburg, W. Va.,
193.
Daniel, F. D., Nashville, Tenn., 178.
Daniel, W. A., Avondale, Ala., 126.
Darnall, H. T., Church, S. C, 171.
Darnall, D. D., W. H., Centre, Ala., 137.
Davidson, H. S., Mangum, I. T., 184.
Davies, D. D., S. W., Fayetteville, Ark., 131.
Davis, E. Mac, McDonough, Ga., 135.
Davis, D. D., E. P., Greenville, S. C, 171.
Davis, J. H., Farmville, Va., 200.
Davis, D. D., John W., Soochow, China, 159.
Davis, L. B., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Davis, W. H., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Davis, W. Y., Louisville, Ky., 141.
Day, Albert, Vanceburg, Kv., 139.
Dendy, J. T., Kershaw, S. C, 168.
Denham, W. D., Nashville, Tenn., 177.
DeVane, T. W., Morven, N. C, 164.
DeYampert, L. A., Luebo, Africa, 124.
Dial, J. D., Durant. Miss., 149.
Dickey, Brooks I., Karnes City, Texas, 189.
Dickey, W. N., Edna, Texas, 190.
Dickey, W. P., Clarendon, Texas, 183.
Dickson, D. D., J. A., Camden, Ark., 130.
Diehl, C. E., Greenville, Miss., 148.
Dixon, H. M., McColl, S. C, 172.
Dixon, J. H., Waxhaw, N. C, 164.
Doak, A. H., Jonesboro, Tenn., 175.
Doak, A. S., Bryson, Tenn., 175.
Dobbs, Jr., C. H., Senatobia, Miss., 152.
Dobbs, St., C. H., Brownwood, Texas, 181.
Dobyns, W. R., St. Joseph, Mo., 157.
Dodge, D. D., W. H., Richmond, Ky., 143.
Doggett, J. P., Cucky City, Tenn., 175.
Doggett, D. D., M. W., El Paso, Texas, 186.
Doggett, W. T., Danville, Va., 199.
Dolphy, O. C, River Junction, Fla., 132.
Donaldson, D. D., N., Huntington, W. Va.
194.
Dorritee, J. A., Corpus Christi, Texas, 189.
Douglas, D. M., Baltimore, Md., 197.
Douglas, R. E., Macon, Ga., 138.
Downing, W. L., Midland, Texas, 186.
Dozier, W. E., Carrollton, Ga., 135.
Drennan, F. A., Liberty, S. C, 174.
Drew, D. D., Thos., Chase City, Va., 199.
Druen, E. B., Basic City, Va., 195.
DuBose, D. D., H. C, Soochow, China, 172.
DuBose, P. C, Soochow, China, 169.
DuBose, R. M., Gallatin, Tenn., 178.
DuBose, S. W., Statesboro, Ga., 139.
Duckwall, J. McC, Berkley Springs, W. Va.
201.
Dudley, D. D., C. R., Sykesville, Md., 197.
Duff, Guy B., Hardin, Mo., 157.
Duncan, J. C, Wylam, Ala., 127.
Duncan, M. F., Philadelphia, Pa., 135.
Dunglinson, Jos., Columbiana, Ala.. 127.
Dupuy, B. H., Davis, W. Va., 201.
Dyer, Jas., Eagletown, I. T., 187.
Dzen, Dah Zan, Hanchow, China, 140.
Eakins, W. J., Italy, Texas, 183.
Earle, A. M., Kunsan, Korea, 190.
Eddins, J. F., Commerce, Texas, 188.
Edenbern, J. S., Little Rock, Ark., 129.
Edge, W. W., Flemington, Ga., 139.
Edmiston, A. L., Luebo, Africa., 124.
Edmiston, G. L., Nevada, Mo., 153.
Edmunds, D. D., N. W., Sumter, S. C, 171.
Edwards, J. E., St. Louis, Mo., 141.
Eggleston, R. B., Richmond, Va., 192.
Elder, J. M. W., Charlotte C. H., Va., 199.
Eldridge, W. M., West Point, Miss., 153.
Elwang, W. W., Columbia, Mo., 154.
Engle, S. M., Berkley Springs, W. Va., 202.
English, D. D., T. R., Richmond, Va., 199.
Epes, D. D., Theo. P., Blackstone, Va., 192.
Epperson, C. C, N. Birmingham, Ala., 126.
Erickson, Alfred, Phelps, Ky., 139.
Erickson, S. M., Mobile, Ala., 126.
Ervin, E. E., De Funiak Springs, Fla., 132.
Erwin, T. W., McKinney, Texas, 182.
Escott, H. V., Jellico, Tenn., 143.
Eskridge, R. S., Asheville, N. C, 158.
Evans, H. C, Milford. Texas, 183.
Evans, J. M., Maysville, Ky., 139.
Evans, Jos., St. Pauls, N. C, 162.
Evans, D. D., W. W.. Walton. Ky., 139.
Ewing, C. L., Miles, Texas, 181.
Ewing, D. D., F. L., Germantown, Tenn.
177.
Ewing, J. M., Stonega, Va., 196.
Fair, D. D., J. Y., Savannah, Ga., 139.
Fairley, David, Manchester, N. C, 161.
Fairley, W. M., Fayetteville, N. C. 162.
Farries, F. W., Goldsboro, N. C, 157.
Fennel, H. C, Loundesville, S. C, 173.
Ferguson, A. G., Vernal, Miss., 150.
Ferguson, A. N., Laurinsburg, N. C, 161.
Fernandez, Abram. Zacatecas, Mexico, 190.
Ferran, C. H., Lake City, Fla., 133.
Ficklen, J. B., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Fincher, E. B., Amarillo, Texas, 183.
Fincher, F. E., Greenville, Texas, 187.
Finley, D. D., G. W., Fichersville, Va., 195.
Fix, J. J., Manchester, Va.. 192.
Fleming, J. D., Memphis, Tenn., 130.
Fleming. D. D., R. H., Lynchburg, Va., 197.
Flinn, H. W., Birmingham, Ala., 126.
Flinn, D. D., J. Wm., Columbia, S. C, 169.
Flinn, R. O., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Flournoy, D. D., P. P., Rpthepda. Md., 196.
Flournoy, W. C. Gap Mills. W. Va., 193.
Flow, J. E., Kerney, Mo., 157.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES. 221
Fogartie, D. D., J. E., Hopkinsville, Ky., 142.
Forbis, J. Mc, King's Mountain, N. C, 163.
Ford, E. W., McComb, Miss., 151.
Ford, J. F., Florala, Ala., 132.
Foreman, W. S., Memphis, Mo., 155.
Forsyth, J. F., Crocker, Mo., 153.
Foster, J. S., Petersburg, Va., 192.
Foster, D. D., S. J., Birmingham, Ala., 126.
Foster, W. C. C, Jasper, Ala., 127.
Franklin, B. H., Edgefield, Tenn., 178.
Fraser, D. D., A. M., Staunton, Va., 195.
Fraser, Chalmers, Lancaster, S. C, 168.
Fraser, J. K. G., Charleston, S. C, 169.
Fraser, Simon, Junction, Texas, 190.
Frazer, W. H., Macon, Ga., 138.
French, D. D., J. B., Fort Worth, Texas, 186.
Friend, Chas., Belle Haven, Va., 198.
Frierson, D. E., Manse, Ky., 143.
Frierson, W. B., Shuqualak, Miss., 153.
Fulton, D. M., Darlington, S. C, 172.
Fulton, D. D., S. P., Tokio, Japan, 169.
Fulton, R. E., Newton, Miss. 150.
Fultz, R. E., Greenbank, W. Va., 193.
Furr, W. E., Helena, Ark., 131.
Gage, D. S., Fulton, Mo., 155.
Gaines, D. D., F. H., Decatur, Ga., 135.
Galbraith, W. F., Sulphur Springs, Tex., 183.
Gallaher, D. D., Thos., Rennselaer, Mo., 155.
Gallaher, T. F., Longview, Texas, 187.
Gait, Thos., Dorchester, Va., 190.
Garrison, W. J., Sinks Grove, W. Va., 193.
Garth, J. G., Murfreesboro, Tenn., 178.
Gaston, V. R., St. Charles, S. C, 171.
George, R. W., Francisco, N. C, 165.
Ghiselin, D. D., Shepherdstown, W. Va., 201.
Gibbs, J. M., Statesville, N. C, 161.
Gibbons, J. P., Hugo, I. T., 187.
Gilkeson, C. D., Moorefield, W. Va., 202.
Gill, Leonard, Beeville, Texas, 190.
Gill, S. S., Hickory Withe, Tenn., 177.
Gillespie, E. E., Richmond, Va., 165.
Gilliard, E. M., Tuscaloosa, Ala., 124.
Gillon, W. A., Cameron, Texas, 182.
Gilmer, G. H., Draper, Va., 190.
Gilmer, John A., Newton, N. C, 159.
Gilmore, R. C, Bessemer, Ala., 127.
Gilmour, A. D. P., Bristol, Tenn., 176.
Ginn, I. M., Nashville, Ark., 130.
Gladney, R. L., 147.
Glasgow, L. K., Davidson, N. C, 195.
Glass, Gilbert, Stanford, Ky., 143.
Glass, D. D., Harvey, Somerset. Ky., 143.
Glassell, John, Belcher, La., 147.
Goddard, Wm., Dallas, Texas, 183.
Goode, B. E., 193.
Goodman, J. W., Greensboro, N. C, 165.
Gordon, D. D., E. C, Lexington, Mo., 153.
Gordon, C. M., Mcintosh, 133.
Gordon, J. B., Lewisburg, Tenn., 174.
Gowan, Peter, Wesson, Miss., 151.
Grafton, D. C, C. W., Union Church, Miss.,
151.
Grafton, T. B., Hsuchowfu, China, 151.
Graham, D. D., A. T., Davidson, N. C, 159.
Graham, H. T., Farmville, Va., 201.
Graham, D. D., J. R., Winchester, Va., 201.
Graham, Jr., J. R., Tsing Kiang Pu, China,
202.
Graves, F. R., Courtland, Ala., 126.
Graves, J. A., Bedford City, Va., 197.
Gray, Robert, Dublin, Va., 190.
Gray, W. B., Eminence, Ky., 141.
Green, D. D., E. M., Danville, Ky., 143.
Green, J. B., Fayetteville, Tenn., 174.
Green, J. E., Arkadelphia, Ark., 130.
Green, J. H., Cooper, Texas, 186.
Green, J. L., Mena, Ark., 130.
Green. T. L., Malvern, Ark., 130.
Greenlee, J. M., Marion, N. C, 159.
Greenlee, W. M., Atlanta, Ga., 140.
Gregg, F. W., Pendleton, S. C, 173.
Gregg, W. A., Bishopville, S. C, 171.
Gregory, A. P., Beaver Lick, Ky., 140.
Gregory, E. H., Moss Point, Miss., 150.
Grey, J. H., Salisbury, N. C, 160.
Grier, J. J., Waco, Texas, 181.
Grier, J. M., Huntersville, N. C, 163.
Grier, M. B., Hsu Chou Fu, China, 173.
Grier, R. L., Manning, S. C, 171.
Griffin, G. O., Greensboro, Ga., 137.
Grigsby, S. L., Jonesboro, Ark., 129.
Grillbortzer, G. A., Bedford Springs, Va., 192.
Grinnan, D. D., R. B., Hendersonville, N. C,
158.
Grover, A. E., Point Pleasant, W. Va., 194.
Groves, C. O., Braidertown, Fla., 133.
Groves, W. H., Gloucester C. H., Va., 198.
Guerrant, D. D., E. O., Wilmore, Ky., 143.
Guille, Geo. E., Augusta, Ga., 136.
Gwinn, P. H., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Haden, R. A., Kiangyin, China, 147.
Haffner, W. A., Bowling Green, S. C, 167,
168.
Hagan, W. C, Fitzgerald, Ga., 139.
Hagins, Jos., Zoneton, Ky., 141.
Hall, Arnold, Norfolk, Va., 198.
Hall, Gaines B., Dublin, Texas, 180, 181.
Hall, J. A., Alvin, Texas, 180.
Hall, J. K., McConnellsville, S. C, 167.
Hall, J. P., Plum Tree, N. C, 160.
Hall, J. T., Cardenas, Cuba, 153
Hall, R. M., Robertson, Texas, 180.
Hall, S. O., Tazewell, Va., 190.
Hall, W. A., Trenton, Miss., 147, 148.
Hall, W. A., Wytheville, Va., 190.
Hall, D. D., W. T., Columbia, S. C, 167.
Haman, T. L., Vaiden, Miss., 147.
Hames, L. G., Demopolis, Ala., 128.
Hamilton, A. H., Steele's Tavern, Va., 195.
Hamiter, W. S., Iva, S. C, 173.
Hammock, R. M., Colorado, Texas, 186.
Hammond, H. C, Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Handley, D. D., L. S., Birmingham, Ala., 126.
Haney, T. F., Concord, N. C, 160.
Haney, J. Z., Texarkana, Ark., 188.
Hannah, Jos. E., Thomaston, Ga., 136.
Hanrahan, G. B., Abingdon, Va., 190.
Hansel, M. E., Alpena, Va., 195.
Harden, W. S., Douglas, Ga., 139.
Hardin, J. C, Canton, N. C, 158.
Hardin, D. D., M. D., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Hardin, R. E., Brownwood, Texas, 181.
Hardin, T. A., Belfast, Tenn., 174.
Harlan, G. W., Farmington, Mo., 156.
Harper, L. F., Waterford, Va., 197.
Harrell, J. J., Westminster, S. C, 173.
Harrell, W. L., Monticello, Ga., 136.
Harris, J. A., Micaville, N. C, 159.
Harris, J. K., Floyd C. H., Va., 197.
Harris, J. M., Jefferson, S. C, 168.
Harris, W. E. B., Nashville, Tenn., 178.
Harris, W. F., Union Springs, Ala., 124.
Harrison, W. B., Chunju, Korea, 143.
Harrison, W. W., Greenwood, Miss., 148.
Harrop, Ben., Ronceverte, W. Va., 193.
Harsha, W. J., Fort Worth, Texas, 187.
Hartman, F. G., Greenville, N. C, 158.
Hawes, D. D., H. H., Charlottesville, Va.,
197.
Hawes, S. P., Columbia, Tenn., 174.
Hawes, D. D., T. M., Louisville, Ky., 140.
Hawkins, H. P., Luebo, Africa, 149.
Hawley, F. M., Florence, Ala., 127.
Hawthorne, D. M., Thomasville, N. C, 165.
Hay, S. H., Clover, S. C, 167.
Hav, T. P., Gainesville, Fla., 133.
Hedleston, D. D., W. D., Oxford, Miss., 152.
Hemphill, D. D., C. R., Louisville, Ky., 140.
Hemphill, W. P., Griffin, Ga., 135.
Henderlite, J. H., Henderson, N. C, 158.
Henderlite, R. E., Anniston, Ala., 126.
Henderlite, P. B., Accomack, Va., 198, 199.
Henderson, J. G., Cokesbury, S. C 174.
Henderson, J. W., Natchez. Miss., 151.
Henderson, L. G., Griffin, Ga., 135.
Henderson, M. A., Rutherfordton, N. C, 163.
222
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
Henderson, W. R. ( California, Mo., 153.
Henery, J. D., Iron Gate, Va., 198.
Henry, Hugh, Danville, Va., 199.
Hensley, P. H., St., Forrest City, Ark., 129.
Hensley, P. H., Jr., Grayson, Ky., 139.
Herndon, J. G., LaGrange, Ga., 135.
Herndon, J. R., Glade Spring, Va., 190.
Herries, A. J., Washington, N. C, 158.
Hersman, D. D., C. C, Richmond, Va., 192.
Hickling, Thos., Brenham, Texas, 179.
Hickman, W. L., Bonham, Texas, 188.
Hickok, C. E., Farmington, Mo., 156.
Hill, E. L., Eufaula, Ala., 124.
Hill, D. D., H. G., Maxton, N. C, 161.
Hill, J. J., Liberty, Mo., 157.
Hill, D. D., Robert, Dallas, Texas, 182.
Hillhouse, J. B., Covington, Ga., 135.
Hillhouse, D. D., J. S., Vicksburg, Miss., 147.
Hilton, J. W., Byhalia, Miss., 149.
Hines, R. W., Mebane, N. C, 165.
Hitner, J. K., Montgomery, W. Va., 194.
Hobson, Bowling, Pearisburg, Va., 197.
Hobson, J. E., Water Valley, Miss., 152.
Hodgin, C. E., Greensboro, N. C. 165.
Hogarth, Thos., Jarratt's, Va., 192.
Hogue, D. D., C. L., Denton, Texas, 182.
Holderby, D. D., A. R., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Kolladay, J. M., Manning, S. C, 171.
Hollingsworth, D. W., Hinton, W. Va., 193.
Hollingsworth, W. F., Brunswick, Ga., 139.
Hollingsworth, W. T., Lafayette, Ala., 124.
Hollis, C. W., Greenwich, Va., 191.
Holt, B. H., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Holt, J. W., Alderson, W. Va., 193.
Hoon, H. W., San Antonio, Texas, 189.
Hooper, D. D., T. W., Christiansburg, Va.,
197.
Hope, S. R., Toyohashi, Japan, 169.
Hopkins, D. D., A. C, Charleston, W. Va.,
201.
Hopkins, Jr., A. C, Hampton, Va., 199.
Hopper, J. H., Perryville, Ky., 143.
Home, D. D., T. J., Orange, Texas, 1S4.
Horton, T. C, Dallas, Texas, 1S3.
Hotchkin, C. E.. Durant, Ind. Ter., 187.
Hough, G. A., Columbus, Ga., 138.
Houston, J. L. D., Prairie Grove, Ark., 131.
Houston, R. R., Amsterdam, Va., 197.
Howard. C. M., Oldtown, Va., 197.
Howerton, G. M., Bcthune, S. C, 171.
Howerton, D. D., J. R., Charlotte, N. C, 163.
Howison, R. R., Fredericksburg, Va., 192.
Hoyt, D. D., H. F., Commerce, Ga., 134.
Huber, C. M., Crystal Springs, Miss., 151.
Hudson, Geo., Hangchow, China, 179.
Hudson, J. B., Galveston, Texas, 180.
Hudson, R. B., Bland, Va., 190. 191.
Hudson, W. E., Huttonsville, W. Va., 195.
Hudson, W. H., Kashing. China, 169.
Hudson, W. T., Greenville, S. C, 171.
Hughes, Wm., Hico, Texas, 182.
Humphreys, D. D., C. W., Jackson, Ga., 135.
Humphreys, L., Lawrenceburg, Ky., 143.
Hunt, F. D.. Greenville, S. C. 170.
Hunter, D. D., J. G.. Harrodsburg, Ky., 143.
Hunter, R. J., Concord. N. C, 160.
Hunter, T. M., Baton Rouge, La., 145.
Hunter, W. M., Newport News. Va., 199.
Huntington. G. C, Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Hutton, C. M., Fort Worth, Texas, 186.
Hutton, D. D., J. B., Jackson, Miss., 147.
Hutton, D. D., M. C, Georgetown, Texas, 181.
Hutton. S. G.. Edna. Texas, 132.
Hyde, C. R., Little Rock, Ark., 129.
Hyland. Chas. A., Yokena, Miss., 146.
Ingle, E. T., Tpxarkana, Texas, 188.
Irons, A. G., San Antonio, Texas, 190.
Trvin, J. L., Americus, Ga., 13S.
Irvine, R. A., Clay City, Kv., 143.
Irvine, D. D., Wm.. Bowling Green, Ky., 141.
Irvine, W. H.. Indianola, Miss., 148.
Irwin, L. W., Radford. Va.. 197.
Irwin, P. C, Poteau, Ind. Ter., 184.
Isler, S. H., Goldsboro, N. C, 166.
Ivy, J. N., Waxahachie, Texas, 183.
Jackson, Spencer, Nashville, Tenn., 178.
Jacobs, J. F., Clinton, S. C, 170.
Jacobs, J. R., San Marcos, Texas, 189.
Jacobs, Thornwell, Nashville, Tenn., 169.
Jacobs, D. D., W. P., Clinton, S. C, 170.
Jacobs, W. S., Nashville, Tenn., 178.
James, Albert A., Pacolet, S. C, 170.
James, J. A., Anderson, S. C, 173.
Jarvis, Jas. H., Scotland Neck, N. C, 151.
Jeffries, E. D., Alderson, W. Va., 193.
Jennings, C. A. B., Reidville, S. C, 170.
Johnson, Angus, Avalon, Texas, 182.
Johnson, A. L., Royston, Ga., 134.
Johnson, C. W., Dermott, Ark., 131.
Johnson, D. D., Josephus, Victoria, Tex., 189.
Johnson, J. C, Richwood, W. Va., 193.
Johnson, J. G., Waverly, Tenn., 178.
Johnson, D. D., T. C, Richmond, Va., 199.
Johnston, L. B., South Boston, Va., 199.
Johnston, R. Z., Lincolnton, N. C, 163.
Johnston, T. C, Pine Bluff, Ark., 131.
Johnston, T. D., Burgaw, N. C, 167.
Johnston, W. K., Cisco, Texas, 186.
Jones, D. D., Alfred, Fredericksburg, Va.,
191.
Jones, D. D., A. G., San Antonio, Texas, 189.
Jones, C. E., Oakland, Fla., 133.
Jones, F. D., Aiken, S. C, 169.
Jones, F. F., Champe, Va., 192.
Jones, D. D., J. E., Meridian, Miss., 150.
Jones, O. G., Big Springs, Texas, 186.
Jones, P. F., Arvonia, Va., 201.
Jones, W. A., Woodville, Texas, 185.
Jopling, R. W., Clifton Forge, Va., 197.
Junkin, D. P., Huntsville, Texas, 180.
Junkin, W. F., Suchien, China, 130.
Junkin, W. M., Kunsan, Korea, 197.
Jurey, G. W., Lamar, Mo., 153.
Keathey, N. B., Marion Junction, Ala., 128.
Kegley, H. C, Gadsden, Ala., 127.
Kelly, James, Clarkton, N. C, 166.
Kennedy, B. D., Troy, Mo., 156.
Kennedy, E. P., Monticello, Ark., 131.
Kennedy, J. C, Mount Mourne, N. C, 159.
Kennedy, J. J., Gastonia, N. C, 163.
Kennedy, M. S., Pulaski, Tenn., 174.
Kennison, J. S., Yoakum, Texas, 189.
Kerr, John E., Montgomery City, Mo., 154.
Kerschner, Lewis M., Spencer, N. C, 160.
Killough, W. W., Perryville, Mo., 156.
Kilpatrick, W. M., New Waverly, Texas, 179.
Kimbrough, T. T., Scooba, Miss., 153.
Kimmons, J. A., Live Oak, Fla., 133.
Kimmons, J. M., Oxford, Miss., 154.
King, F. R., Afton, Tenn., 176.
King, D. D., Samuel A., Austin, Texas, 181.
Kins. W. J., Williamsburg, Va., 199.
King, Alfred, Palmer, ?/Iiss., 149.
Kingsley, Chas., Lithia, Fla., 133.
Kinnaird, R. L., Excelsior Springs. Mo., 157.
Kirk, Harris E., Baltimore, Md., 197.
Kirkpatrick, R. F., Austin, Texas, 181.
Kirkpatrick, M. R., Seneca, S. C, 174.
Knox, T. S., Carlsbad, N. M., 186.
LaBach, D. D., J. M., Crittenden, Ky., 139.
Lackey. J. F.. Nashville. Tenn., 178.
Lacy, C. R., Frankford, W. Va., 193.
Lacy, D. D., J. H., Clarksville, Tenn., 178.
Lacy, J. McD. A., Marion, Va., 191.
Lacy, J. W., Glenwood, Md., 197.
Lacy, D. D., M. L., Lewisburg, W. Va., 193.
Lacy, W. S., Bat'esville, Ark., 130.
Lafferty, J. W.. Eatenton, Ga., 136.
Laird, A. F., Winona, Miss.. 148.
Laird, H. R., Millersburg, Ky., 139.
Laird, D. D., W. R., Danville, Va., 199.
Lambdin, M. B., Fort Worth, Texas, 186.
Lambert, A. N., Festus, Mo., 156.
Lancaster, R. V., Abingdon, Va., 191.
Lander, D. L., Uniontown, Ala., 197.
Lane, E. E., Bedford City, Va., 197.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
223
Lane, J. G., Marianna, Ark., 129.
Langtry, W. M., Clayton, Mo., 156.
Lapsley, James, Vine Hill, Ala., 126.
Lapsley, R. A., Ashland, Va., 192.
Latham, D. D., J. E., Batesville, Ark., 129.
Latham, C. W., Jackson, Mo.. 156.
Latham, R. H., Potosi, Mo., 156.
Latimer, D. D., R. M., Birmingham, Ala.,
195.
Latimer, R. S., York, Ala., 12S.
Latimer, T. D.. Springfield, Ky., 143.
Law, D. D., John G., Walhalla, S. C., 173.
Law, P. R., Rich Springs, N. C, 161.
Law, D. D., T. H., Spartanburg, S. C, 169.
Laws, D. D., S. S., Washington, D. C, 196.
Lawson, John F., Fayetteville, Ark., 131.
Lawson, R. E. C, Henderson, Ky., 142.
Layton, D .M., Mt. Meridian, Va., 195.
Leavell, D. D., Win. H., Houston, Tex., 179.
Lee, J. W., Jackson, La., 124, 149.
Leeper, F. L., Jefferson City, Tenn., 175.
Leeper, J. F., Piedmont, W. Va., 202.
Lentz, R. E., Tanglewood, Texas, 179.
Leonard, J. T., Columbia, Mo., 133.
Leps, J. C, Hedgeville, W. Va., 202.
LeQueux, H. D., Taylorsville, N. C, 165.
Leslie, H. W., Oliver Springs, Tenn., 176.
Leslie, J. D., Ballinger, Texas. ISO.
Lewis, D. D., Frank W., Clinton, La., 145.
Lewis, J. H., Baker Mills, W. Va., 193.
Lewis, W. M., Waco, Texas, 181.
Leyburn, E. R., Durham, N. C, 165.
Leyburn, D. D., G. L., Lexington, N. C, 165.
Ligon, R. C, Newberry, S. C, 173.
Ligon, T. C, Townville, S. C, 173.
Lilly, D. D., D. Clay, Winston, N. C, 165.
Lindsay, D. D., W. C, Ocala, Fla., 133.
Lineweaver, J. L., Pickens, W. Va., 196.
Lingamfelter, G. S., Staunton, Va., 195.
Lingle, W. L., Rock Hill, S. C, 168.
Lingle, T. W., 161.
Link, A. G., Strasburg, Va., 202.
Link, Luther, Macon, Ga., 138.
Liston, R. T., Oxford, Ala., 126.
Little, Arch. A., Selma, Ala., 128.
Little, C. H., New Madrid, Mo., 156.
Little, D. D., Seguin, Texas, 189.
Little, James M., Hazle Green, Ky., 143.
Little, John, Louisville, Ky., 141.
Little, L. L., Kiangyin. China, 161.
Lloyd, J. F., Panama, Texas, 186.
Lloyd, W. J. B., Bennington, I. T., 187.
Logan, C. A., Tokushima, Japan, 144.
Logan, D. D., J. V., Danville, Ky., 142.
Logan, Sanford 51., Wilmore, Ky., 144.
Long, R. I., Ripley Tenn., 179.
Long, G. A., Roanoke, Va., 197.
Lowrance, E. S., Abilene, Texas, 186.
Lowrance, W. L., San Saba, Texas, 180.
Lowry, D. D., T. M., Knoxville, Tenn., 176.
Lumpkin, D. D., J. EL, Memphis. Tenn., 177.
Lucton, D. D., J. W., Leesburg, Va., 191.
Lyle. G. T., St. Albans, W. Va., 193.
Lynch, E. C Buchanan, Va., 19S.
Lynn, L. R., Palatka, Fla., 133.
Lvons, D. D., J. S., Louisville, Ky., 140.
Mack, D. D., J. B., Fort Mill, S. C, 164.
Maddox, F. E., Texarkana, Ark., 130.
Maun, R. M., Clinton, N. C, 167.
Marion, J. P., Richburg, S. C, 167.
Marion, Jr., J. P., Martinsville, Va., 200.
Marquess, D. D. W. H., Louisville. Ky., 155.
Marston, Frank, Goodwater, Ala., 126.
Martin, Alex., Summerville, S. C, 169.
Martin, C. P. B., Waverly. Texas, 179.
Martin, D. D., J. L., Easton, Ga., 135.
Martin, Motte, Luebo, Africa, 183.
Martin. S. J., Marion, Ky., 142.
Martindale, C. O'N., Newnan, Ga., 135.
Mason, G. F., Athens, Tenn., 176.
Massey, J. B., Maxwelton, W. Va.. 193.
Mathes, N. D., Cedartown, Ga., 137.
Matheson, J. F., Easley, S. C, 174.
Matheson, R. G., Durham, N. C, 165.
Mathews, W. T., Durant, I. T., 184.
Matthews, Carl, Rapidan, Va., 201.
Matthis, Geo. M., Culpeper, Va., 191.
Maury, C. H., Clarendon, Ark., 131.
Mauze, J. L., St. Louis, Mo., 156.
Maxwell C. W., Lynchburg, Va., 198.
Mayes, G. G., Blackstock, S. C, 168.
McAdams, J. L., Garland, Ark., 130.
McAdie, R. C, Mineral Wells, Texas, 187.
McAllister, D. S., Washington, Ga., 136.
McAllister, J. G., Richmond, Va., 200.
McAlpine, J. R., Pineville, N. C, 163.
McAlpine, R. B., Tuscaloosa, Ala., 128.
McAlpine, R. E., Nagoya, Japan, 126.
McArn, A. H., Cheraw, S. C, 172.
McCain, N. H., Odessa, Mo., 154.
McCall, J. V., Cleburne, Texas, 186.
McCalla, W. R., Lafayette, Ga., 137.
McCallie, D. D., T. H., Chattanooga, Tenn.,
176.
McCallum, A., 149.
McCarty, S. L., Thomasville, Ga., 138.
McCaskill, K., 167.
McClintic, H. P., Plattsburg, Mo., 157.
McCluer, Edwin B., Norfolk, Va., 199.
McCluer, Uncas, Cane Mill, Ark., 131.
McCluer, W. C, Maggard, Ky., 144.
McClure, D. D., A. D., Wilmington, N. C,
166.
McClure, H. E., Columbus, Miss., 153.
McClure, J. A., Front Royal, Va., 202.
McClure, J. W., Lathrop, Mo., 157.
McConnell, D. D., T. M., Camden, S. C, 171.
McCorkle, D. D., E. W., Nicholasville, Ky.,
144.
McCorkle, T. M., Lynchburg, Va., 197.
McCorkle, Wm. P., Savannah, Ga., 139.
McCown, J. H., Lexington, Va., 195.
McCoy, H. P. R., Gum Springs, Va., 201.
McCue, F. L., French Camp, Miss., 147.
McCullogh, J. H., Henderson, Ky., 142.
McCullough, Jas., Fern Creek, Ky., 140.
McCullough, W. H., Eliasville, Texas. 186.
McCurdy, A. H. P., Cuero, Texas, 190.
McCutchen, D. D., F., Rogersville, Tenn.,
175.
McCutchen, L. O., Chunju, Korea, 168.
McDonald, D. D., A., Jackson, Tenn., 179.
McDonald, C. W., Parsons, W. Va., 15S.
McDonald, W. G., El Campo, Texas. 130.
McDougall, E. D., Florence, Ala., 126.
McDowell, Jas., Sumter, S. C, 171.
McDowell, Hervey, Biloxi, Miss., 150.
McElroy, D. D., I. S., Columbus, Ga., 138.
McElroy, D. D., S. A., Cynthiana, Ky., 144.
McElroy, W. T., Mobile, Ala., 125.
McFadden, E. S., Macon, Ga., 139.
McFadden, F. L., Gulf Port, Miss., 150.
McFaden, D. D., F. T., Richmond, Va., 192.
McFadyen, A., Clarkton. N. C, 166.
McFarlane, D. D., J. N., Navasota, Texas,
180.
McFerrin, D. D., J. G., Bristol, Tenn., 176.
McFerrin, M. M., Itasca, Texas, 186.
McGeachy, A. A., Sherman, Texas, 183.
McGeachy, D. P., Lenoir, N. C, 160.
McGUl, S. W., Nashville, Tenn., 178.
Mcllwain, R. J., Clio, Ala., 124.
Mcllwain, W. E., Anniston, Ala., 127.
Mcllwaine, D. D., R., Richmond, Va., 200.
Mcllwaine, W. B., Kochi, Japan, 167.
Mclnnis, J. J., Arcadia, La., 146.
Mclnnis, L. H., Clifton, Texas, 181.
Mclnnis. W. I., Lonoke, Ark., 129.
McTnturff, Robt., Anson, Texas, 186.
Mclntyre, K. M., Carl, N. C. 161.
Mclntyre. Peter, Faisons, N. C, 166.
Mclver, D., Wadesboro, N. C, 164.
Mclver, D. M., Charleston, S. C, 169.
Mclver, K. L., Plant City, Fla., 133.
Mclver, M. N., Rockingham, N. C, 161.
McKay, M. McN., Fort Smith, Ark., 131.
224 ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
McKay, Win., Macon, Ga., 138.
McKay, D. D., W. J., Maysville, S. C, 171.
McKelway, D. D., A. J., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
.MiKeazie, J. F., Eldorado, Ark., 130.
McKinnon, J. F., Little Rock, Ark., 129.
McKinnon, D. D., L., Clinton, N. C, 159.
McLain, H. M., Prescott, Ark., 130.
McLain, J. M., Concord, N. C, 160.
McLauchlin, Archie, Camilla, Ga., 138.
McLauchlin, A. M., North Ft. Worth, Tex.,
186.
McLauchlin, D. D., D., Anniston, Ala., 127.
McLauchlin, H. W., Louisville, Ky., 141.
McLauchlin, W. W., 130.
McLaurin, L. A., Raeford, N. C, 162.
McLean, D. D., J. D., Tyler, Texas, 187.
McLean, J. E., Marshall, Texas, 187.
McLean, L. A., Dickeyville, Md., 196.
McLees, Hugh, Pendleton, S. C, 173.
MeLees, John L., Orangeburg, S. C, 169.
McLees, R. G., Greenwood, S. C, 173.
McLelland, W. R., Statesville, S. C, 159.
McLeod, Bunyan, Bennettsville, S. C, 172.
McLeod, C. B., Jackson, Ala., 125.
McLeod, J. W., New Birmingham, Texas,
185.
McLeod, K. A., Jonesboro, N. C, 161.
McLeod, W. A., Nacogdoches, Texas, 186.
McLin, J. L., Gray Court, S. C, 170, 171.
McMeen, W. H., Selma, Ala., 138.
McMillan, Homer, Buford, Ga., 135, 136.
McMillan, D. D., J. P., Citronelle, Ala., 125.
McMillan, N. W., San Saba, Texas, 181.
McMillan, W. J., Franklin Tenn., 178.
McMullen, J. C, Midway, Ky., 143.
McMurray, J. A., Matthews, N. C, 163.
McMurray, Jos. A., Lynchburg, Va., 197.
McMurry, S. J., Gonzales, Texas, 189.
McNair, L. E., St. Joseph, Mo., 157.
McNair, R. L., Rockville, Md., 197.
McNair, E., Monroe City, Mo., 155.
McNaull, A. N., Lees, Fla., 172.
McNeill, M. D., Sanford, N. C, 161.
McNeilly, D. D., J. H., Nashville, Tenn., 178.
McPheeters, D. D., W. M. ( Columbia, S. C,
167.
McQueen, D., Covington, Ky., 139.
McRae, D. A., San Augustine, Texas, 184.
McRee, J. R., Highland Park, Tenn., 176.
McRoy, Robt., McKinney, Texas, 184, 185.
Meachan, J. B., Mt. Sterling, Ky., 144.
Mebane, D. D., B. W., Mt. Airy, N. C, 165.
Mebane, J. E., Fayetteville, W. Va., 193.
Mebane, W. N., Bristol, Tenn., 191.
Mecklin, A. H., French Camp, Miss., 147.
Mecklin, D. D., J. A.. Arp, Texas, 188.
Mecklin, R. W., Nettleton, Miss., 148.
Megginson, Wm., Nashville, Tenn., 141.
Melvin, M. E., Port Gibson, Miss., 151.
Merrill, V. P., Princeton, Ky., 142.
Mickel, D. D., E. P., Madison, Fla., 132.
Mickle, R. A., Mobile, Ala., 125.
Miley, W. H., Louisville, Ky., 140.
Millard, J. R., Stevenson, S. C, 168.
Millard, M. W., Bethesda, Tenn., 178.
Miller, A. E., Van Buren, Ark., 131.
Millpr, C, Dallas, N. C, 163.
Miller, R. A., Lowell, N. C, 163.
Miller, Henry, Rockbridge Baths, Va., 195.
Miller, W. McC, Charlotte C. H., Va., 199.
Mills, H. J., Ridgeway, S. C, 168.
Mills, W. H., North Augusta, S. C, 169.
Mills. W. W., Camden, S. C, 171.
Milne, W. L., Byhalia, Miss., 152.
Milne, W. S., St. Petersburg, Fla., 133.
Milner, J. E., Lithonia, Ga., 136.
Milner, John, Columbiana, Ala., 126.
Milster, D. D., A. W., DeQueen, Ark., 130.
Minter, W. R., Shelby, N. C, 163.
Mitchell, Frnnc, Kevtesville, Mo., 154.
Mitchell, J. T., Fredericktown, Mo., 156.
Montes, J. D., Vaiden, Miss., 149.
Moffett, D. D., A. S., Lebanon, Ky., 143.
Moffett, L. I., Soochow, China, 143.
Molloy, D. D., J. C, Maysville, Ky., 140.
Moment, D. D., A. H., Raleigh, N. C, 158.
Montgomery, Chas., Mt. Vernon, Ga., 139.
Montgomery, C. R., Elizabethtown, 111., 142.
Montgomery, J. A., Marlin, Texas, 181.
Mooney, J. D., 126.
Mooney, U. D., Birmingham, Ala., 126.
Moore, Carr, Warrenton, N. C, 158.
Moore, E. L., Nashville, Tenn., 178.
Moore, H. C, Moundville, Ala., 128.
Moore, J. H., Keyser, W. Va., 201.
Moore, John W., Susaki, Japan, 163.
j Moore, S. W., Pocahontas, Va., 191.
Moore, D. D., W. W., Richmond, Va., 200.
Morris, D. D., S. L., Atlanta, Ga., 138.
Morrison, D. D., J. H., Memphis, Tenn., 177.
Morrison, R. C, Wildmere, N. Q/, 163.
Morrison, D. D., W. M., Lexington, Va., 130.
Morrison, W. W., Knoxville, Tenn., 176.
Morrow, C. N., Hawthorn, Fla., 133.
Morrow, J. S., N. Wilkesboro, N. C, 165.
Morrow, R. B., West Point, Ga., 124, 125.
Morrow, Wm. H., Augusta, Ark., 129.
Morton, C. H., Sweet Springs, Mo., 153, 154.
Morton, C. J., Elkatawa, Ky., 144.
Morton, E. S., Nagoya, Japan, 191.
Morton, J. B., Stony Point, Tenn., 175.
Morton, J. B., Pulaski, Va., 191.
Morton, D. D., W. D., Rocky Mount, N. C,
157.
Moseley, E. H., Coalgate, I. T., 184.
Moseley, J. W., Jr., Okolona, Miss., 153.
Moseley, J. W., Sr., Hamburg, Ark., 131.
Moseley, R. K., Celina, Texas, 182.
Moseley, T. L., Whitesburg, Ky., 144.
Moser, R. L., Mexico, Mo., 155.
Moss, J. W., Macon, Miss., 153.
Moss, W. T. D., Chapel Hill, N. C, 155.
Mowbray, T., Fincastle, Va., 198.
Munroe, C. A., Hickory, N. C, 159.
Munroe, Dugald, Cotton, N. C, 162.
Muller, D. D., Edwin, Lexington Ky., 144.
Munroe, D. D., E. M., Milford, Texas, 182.
Munroe, H. M., Japan, 197.
Murchison, H. R., Columbia, S. C, 173.
Murray, D. D., E. C, Graham, N. C, 165.
Murray, D. D, James, Worsham, Va., 200.
Murray, W. A., Lincolnton, N. C, 163.
Myers, H. W., Tokushima, Japan, 195.
Myers, Chas. F., Williamson, W. Va., 194.
Nail, D. D., J. H., New Orleans, La., 145.
Nail, D. D., R. H., Greenwood, S. C, 173.
Naylor, Jas F., Gloster, Miss., 145.
Neale, Robert, Laredo, Texas, 189.
Neel, D. D., S. M., Kansas City, Mo., 157.
Neel, D. D., W. H., Memphis, Tenn., 177.
Neilson, W. P., Bloomfield, Ky., 141.
Neville, W. G., Yorkville, S. C, 167.
Newkirk, T. H., Marion, S. C, 172.
Newman, C. S., Canton, Miss., 147.
Newman, H. H., Nashville, Tenn., 178.
Newton, Alexander, Seminary, Miss., 150.
Newton, Henry, Athens, Ga., 134.
Newton, Oscar, Crystal Springs, Miss., 151.
Nicholas, Geo., Boston, Mass., 197.
Nicholas, G. W., Birmingham, Ala., 124.
Nicholson, R. L., Pototoc, Miss., 148.
Nickell, G. W., Marlington, W. Va., 193.
Nisbet, C. R., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Nisbet, J. S., Humboldt, Tenn., 179.
Nisbet. W. A., Savannah, Ga., 139.
Noel, L. D., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Norris, J. I., Orlando, Fla., 133.
Nourse, C. L., New Orleans, La., 145.
Nourse, D. D., W. L., Hopkinsville, Ky., 141.
Oberschmidt. Chas., Ellisville, Miss., 150.
Ogden, D. H., Columbus, Miss., 153.
Oliver, S. S., Petersburg, W. Va., 202.
Orr, J. W., Ensley, Ala., 126.
Orr, R. H., Weldon, N. C, 158.
Osburn, F. W., Old Church, Va., 192.
Otts, R. F., Selma, Ala., 128.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
225
Osborne, I. P., Montongo, Ark., 131.
Overcash, H. R., Cythiana, Ky., 144.
Overstreet, W. T., Perryville, Ky., 143.
Owen, C. C, Mokpo, Korea, 199.
Owings, W. R., Quitman, Ga., 138.
Pace, G. T., Red Springs, N. C, 161, 162.
Painter, G. W., Hangchow, China, 191.
Painter, J. C, Yancey's Mills, Va., 201.
Paisley, J. A., Pamplin City, Va., 199, 200.
Paisley, H. L., Hamburg, Ark., 131.
Palmer, B. B., Semora, N. C, 165.
Palmer, D. D., E. P., Harrisonburg, Va.
Palmer, D. D., W. T., New Orleans, La.,
145.
Palmer, W. W., Windsor, Mo., 155.
Park, D. D., James, Knoxville, Tenn., 176.
Park, John B., Caruthersville, Mo., 156.
Park, J. S., Decatur, Ala., 126.
Parker, H. M., James Islaud, S. C, 169.
Parker, N. A., Green Sulphur Springs, W.
Va., 193.
Patrick, H. H., Des Arc, Ark., 129.
Patterson, A. L., Blackshear, Ga., 139.
Patterson, D. D., B. C, Su Chien, China,
195.
Patterson, E. E., Richwood, W. Va., 194.
Patterson, D. D., G. W., Montgomery, Ala.,
125.
Patterson, R. P., Baton Rouge, La., 145.
Patton, E. D., Marion, Ala., 128.
Patton, D. D., Jas. G., Decatur, Ga., 135.
Patton, D. D., J. H., Marietta, Ga., 137.
Patton, T. A., Milton, Tenn., 178.
Paul, L. H., Mossy Creek, Va., 195.
Paxton, J. D., Lynchburg, Va., 198.
Paxton, J. W., Chinkiang, China, 199.
Peabody, M. E., Madison, Ga., 136.
Pell, R. P., Spartanburg, S. C, 169.
Pendleton, B. A., O'Fallon, Mo., 157.
Penick, D. A., Lexington, Va., 195.
Perkins, F., Binghamton, N. Y., 138.
Perkins, H. M., Stamps, Ark., 130.
Perkins, W. H., Covington, Tenn., 177.
Perryman, A. N., Bryson City, N. C, 159.
Petrie, D. D., G. L., Charlottesville, Va., 200.
Peyton, C. W., Temple, Texas, 181.
Pharr, J. F„, Danielsville, Ga., 134.
Pharr, D. D., W. W., Mooresville, N. C, 159.
Phifer, W. E., Columbus, Ga., 138.
Phillips, D. D., A. L., Richmond, Va., 192.
Phillips, M. L., Thomas, Ala., 149.
Pierce, A. W., Clearwater, Fla., 133.
Pierre, F., Frierson's Mills, La., 147.
Pitman, F. W. T., Abingdon, Va., 191.
Pitzer, D. D., A. W., Washington, D. C, 191.
Planck, D. D., D. A., Mobile, Ala., 125.
Plant, A. M., Texarkana, Tex., 124.
Plowden, J. M., Churchville, Va., 195.
Plunket, D. D., J. T., Augusta, Ga., 136.
Ponder, J. T., Prattville, Ala., 125.
Ponton, A. J., Whittle, Va., 199.
Pool, L., Memphis, Tenn., 177.
Pope, Edward, 178.
Pope, John A., Frankfort, Ky.
Porter, M. B., Crescent Hill, Ky., 140.
Porter, W. S., Summerton, S. C. 171.
Porterfield, R. E., Kennett, Mo., 156.
Potter, T. C, Grier, S. C, 170.
Potter, W. R., Grier, S. C, 170.
Powell, W. W., Jackson, Ky., 144.
Praigg, D. D., J. G., Tuscaloosa, Ala., 128.
Pratt, H. W., Washington, D. C, 191.
Pressly, E. E., Statesville, N. C, 159.
Pressly, H. M., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Preston, Cochran, Columbia, Tenn., 175.
Preston, J. F., Mokpo, Korea 170.
Preston, D. D., S. R., Greenville, S. C, 169.
Price, A. O., Madison, Tenn., 178.
Price, B. L., Alexandria, La., 145.
Price, H. B., Kobe, Japan, 147.
Price, P. B., Richmond, Va., 198.
Price, P. F., Sing Chang, China, 197.
Price, D. D., Robert, Clarksville, Tenn., 178.
O
Price, W. F., Files, Texas, 193.
Price, Wm. T., Marlinton, W. Va., 193.
Primrose, D. D., J. W., Texarkana, Texas.
Purcell, J. M., Lockhart, Texas, 189.
Quarles, D. D., J. A., Lexington, Va., 195.
Quarterman, J. W., Dawson, Ga., 132.
Quarterman, N. P., Quincy, Fla., 132.
Query, J. W., Welford, S. C, 170.
Quigg, D. D., Henry, Conyers, Ga., 135.
Rachal, A. S., Shawville, Va., 197.
Railey, F. G., Bartow, Fla., 133.
Raine, Michaux, Concord Depot, Va., 200.
Ralston, C. J., Caney, I. T., 187.
Ramsay, F. P., Bristol, Tenn., 191.
Ramsay, J. A., Houston, Texas, 179.
Rankin, C. F., Red Springs, N. C, 161.
Rankin, S. M., Greensboro, N. C, 165.
Ratchford, C. B., Kirksville, Ky., 143.
Ratchford, G. R., Paint Rock, Texas, 181.
Ratchford, W. W., Waxhaw, N. C, 167.
Ray, Jr., G. H., Amherst C. H., Va., 200.
Raymond, D. D., H. R., Starkville, Miss.,
153.
Raymond, D. D., T. W., Holly Springs, Misa.,
" 152.
Raynal, C. E., Birmingham, Ala., 127.
Reavis, J. O., Dallas, Texas, 183.
Red, W. S., Hempstead, Texas, 179.
Reed, J. L., Daisy, Tenn., 125.
Reed, D. D., R. C, Columbia, S. C, 135.
Reid, B. P., Reidsville, S. C, 170.
Reid, R. H., Reidsville, S C, 169.
Rennie, Joseph, Norfolk, Va., 199.
Rennie, J. R., Amelia C. H., Va., 192.
Reveley, J. G., Mill Gap, Va., 195.
Reynolds, Jr., Wm. D., Chunju, Korea, 199.
Rhea, J. M., Bristol, Tenn., 151.
Rhodes, P. S., Alexander City, Ala., 125.
Rice, A. D., Tsing Kiang, China, 182.
Rice, D. D., T. H., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Richards, C. M., Statesville, N. C, 160.
Richards, J. G., Blenheim, S. C, 172.
Richardson, H. G., Clarksburg, W. Va., 195.
Richardson, J. M., Orrwood, Miss., 152.
Richardson, W. H., McKinney, Texas, 182.
Richmond, C. F., Paris, Mo., 155.
Rieves, S. L., McKinney, Texas, 183.
Riley, D. D., J. R., Greenville, S. C, 173.
Riley, R. Q.
Robbins, F. E., Beaumont, Texas, 184.
Roberts, J. K., Carthage, N. C, 162.
Robertson, C. E., Conway, S. C, 172.
Robertson, G. F., Paris, Texas, 187.
Robertson, Ivanhoe, Lynchburg, Va., 196.
Robertson, Johnston, Grandview, Texas, 187.
Robertson, J. P., Sherman, Texas, 183.
Robinson, C. W., Asheboro, N. C, 165.
Robinson, E. B., Marshville, N. C, 164.
Robinson, G. S., Palestine, Texas, 185.
Robinson, J. M., Belton, Texas, 181.
Robinson, R. A., Norfolk, Va., 199.
Rochester, Tuscaloosa, Ala., 124.
Rogers, D. P., Princeton, Va., 198.
Rogers, R. L., Walhalla, S. C, 173.
Rogers, F. E., Lafayette, La., 145.
Rolston, Holmes, Snyder, Va., 195.
Rose, H. B., Austin, Texas, 181.
Rose, D. D., J. M., Laurinburg, N. C, 161.
Roseborough, J. W., Union Springs, Ala.
Rosebro, D. D., J. W., Fredericksburg, Va.,
192.
Ross, L. F., Warsaw, Mo., 159.
Ross, W. A., Fort Smith, Ark., 131.
Rothrock, J. T., Somerville, Tenn., 177.
Roudebush, D. D., G. S., Ridgeland, Miss.,
147.
Roundtree, J. D., Linden, Ala., 129.
Rout, D. D., G. H., Versailles, Ky., 143.
Rowbotham, Arthur, Roanoke, Va., 197.
Rowe, J. D., Conover, N. C, 151.
Ruff, John, Mt. Clinton, Va., 195.
Ruff, W. W., Murate, Va., 171.
Ruffner, D. D., S. T., Broadway, Va., 195.
226 ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
Rule, John, Goshen, Ky., 140.
Rumple, D. D., J., Salisbury, N. C, 159.
Rusk, W. H., Conyers, Ga., 137.
Russell, E. W., Mountville, Ga., 135.
Russell, James, Chester, S. C., 167.
Russo, Christopher, New Orleans, La., 145.
Rutherford, D. D., E. H., Paris, Ky., 140.
Ryland, Xenothan, Higginsville, Mo., 154.
Sadler, W. W., McClellandsville, S. C, 169.
Sailes, J. T., Arcadia, La., 147.
Sale, F. A., Sherman, Texas, 183.
Sample, E. A., Hendersonville, N. C, 158.
Sample, W. O., Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Sampson, D. D., T. R., Austin, Texas, 182.
Sanders, R. S., Lexington, Ky., 144.
Sang Kien Dang, Hangchow, China, 141.
Sasa Kura, Yakichi, Richmond, Va., 192.
Saunders, D. D., M., Shepherdsville, Ky.,
142.
Sayad, Michael, Urumia, Persia, 193.
Scanlon, D. H., Berryville, Va.. 202.
Scott, C. B., Heidelberg, Miss., 149.
Scott, G. P., Dyersburg, Tenn., 179.
Scott, D. D., J. A., Statesville, N. C, 160.
Scott, L. E., Crewe, Va., 192.;
Scott, W. M., Memphis, Tenn., 177.
Scott, D. D., W. N., Staunton, Va., 195.
Scott, W. S., San Antonio, Texas, 189.
Scudder, D. D., H. M., Carlisle, Ky., 140.
Seabrook, J. McL., Charlottesville, Va., 201.
Searight, H. B., Acworth, Ga., 137.
Sechrest, W. J., Belcher, La., 130, 146.
Sedgwick, J. M., Brandon, Miss., 148.
Selridge, L. E., Coleman, Texas, 180.
Sentelle, M. E., Davidson, N. C, 186.
Sevier, J. R., Lynchburg, Va., 198.
Shaw, A. R., Portsmouth, Va., 199.
Shaw, Colin, Klondike, N. C, 166.
Shaw, M. B., Centreville, Miss., 145.
Shaw, J. S., Plantersville, Ala., 128.
Shaw, W. M., Kenansville, N. C, 166.
Shearer, D. D., J. B., Davidson, N. C, 159.
Sheltman, Clyde, Martinsville, Va., 198.
Sheppard, D. F., Daisy, Ga., 139.
Sheppard, W. H., Tuscaloosa, Ala., 135.
Sherrard, J. L., Reeky Mount, Va., 200.
Shewmaker, W. O., Pisgah, Ky., 143.
Shields, M. McG., Goldsboro, N. C, 158.
Shiffler, S. F., Independence, Mo., 154.
Shimmon, K. H., Oroomiah, Persia, 169.
Shipley, G. W., Suffolk, Va., 199.
Shive, J. C, Abbeville, S. C, 173.
Shive, J. M., Gainesville, Texas, 183.
Shive, W. E., Fort Worth, Texas, 186.
Sholl, C. S., Brownsville, Texas, 179.
Shopoff, D. J., Hartwood, Va., 191.
Sibley, J. S., Pensacola, Fla., 132.
Sikes, W. M., Madison, N. C, 165.
Siler, E. L., High Point, N. C, 165.
Siler, J. W., San Angelo, Texas, 180.
Simmons, K. P., Rome, Ga., 137.
Simpson, E. W., India, 152.
Simpson, F. T., Aonia, Ga., 136.
Simpson, J. A., Corbin, Ky., 143.
Simpson, L. A., Toccoa, Ga., 134.
Simpson, L. R., Princeton, Ark., 131.
Simpson, T. E., Society Hill, S. C, 172.
Sims, F. K., Mobile, Ala., 125.
Singleton, D. D., H. L., New York, N. Y.,
196.
Sinnott, W. I., Tuscaloosa, Ala., 126.
Sloan, J. M., Alderson, W. Va., 193.
Sloan, T. W., Greenville, S. C, 170.
Smith, E. A., Brewton, Ala., 125.
Smith, D. D., E. E., Owensboro, Ky., 141.
Smith, E. G., Greensboro, Ga., 136.
Smith, D. D., E. W., Greensboro, N. C, 165.
Smith, H. C, Erata, Miss., 150, 151.
Smith, H. Maxey, Sinchang, China, 170.
Smith, H. M., Bowie, Texas, 183.
Smith, J. Addison, Pattonville, Mo., 156, 157.
Smith, J. C, Poplar Camp, Va., 191.
Smith, J. K., Shreveport, La., 146.
Smith, D. D., J. P., Richmond, Va., 192.
Smith, J. P., Jr., Murat, Va., 196.
Smith, J. S., Fairfield, Va., 195.
Smith, Letcher, Manley, N. C, 162.
Smith, M. D., Dalton, Ga., 137.
Smith, M. S., Extra, Miss., 151.
Smith, Newton, College Hill, Miss., 152.
Smith, D. D., N. K., Darien, Ga., 139.
Smith, R. P., Asheville, N. C, 158.
Smith, S. C, Jefferson, N. C, 165.
Smith, D. D., S. M., Columbia, S C, 169.
Smith, V. G., Fayetteville, N. C, 162.
Smith, W. C. Reidville, S. C, 170.
Smith, W. H., Morristown, Tenn., 175.
Smylie, M., Liberty, Miss., 145.
Snedecor, J. G., Tuskaloosa, Ala., 126.
Snoddy, A. C, Newport, Tenn., 176.
Snook, E. A., Springfield, W. Va., 201, 202.
Sonders, E. W., Fayetteville, N. C, 162.
Southall, T. D., McDowell, Va., 196.
Spann, W. H., Nashville, Tenn.
Sparrow, G. A., Lowell, N. C, 163.
Spears, W. T., Washington, Ky., 140.
Spence, T. H, Rock Hill, S. C, 168.
Spencer, A. E., Rome, Ga., 137.
Spencer, J. M., Fulton, Mo., 155.
Spencer, L. O., Elizabethtown, Ky., 142.
Spencer, S. H, Morven, N. C, 163.
Springall, H. S., Ennis, Texas, 183.
Sprunt, D. D., Alex., Charleston, S. C, 169.
Spurlin, W. D., Demopolis, Ala., 147.
Squires, W. H. T., Bristol, Va., 191.
Stacy, C. I., Waynesboro, Ga., 136.
Stacy, D. D., James, Newnan, Ga., 135.
Stagg, D. D., J. W., Birmingham, Ala., 127.
Starbuck, V. H, Franklin, N. C, 158, 159.
Steele, R. E., Sutton, W. Va., 196, 199.
Steen, D. D., G. H., Petersburg, Tenn., 175.
Stephen, W. O., Butler, Ga., 138.
Stephenson, D. D., P. D., Woodstock, Va.,
201.
Stevenson, J. E., Elberton, Ga., 134.
Stevenson, J. P., Piedmont, Ala., 127.
Stewart, C. L., Pelzer, S. C, 174.
Stewart, E. M., Fayette, Miss., 151.
Stewart, G. R., Chondrant, La., 146.
Stewart D. D., J. C, Richmond, Va., 192.
Stimson, R. D., Climax, Ga., 138.
Stitt, J. L., Kahoka, Mo., 155.
Stockard, D. M.
Stoddard, W. W., Fulton, Mo., 155.
Stokes, J. W., Dublin, Ga., 138.
Storey, E. L., Denton, Texas, 183.
Storey, G. T., Houston, Texas, 180.
Story, G. W., Houston, Texas, 179.
Story, J. C, Peden, N. C, 165.
Stribling, C. R., Waynesboro, Va., 195.
Stribling, T. M., Perry, Mo., 155.
Strickland, W. F., Seneca, S. C, 173.
Strickler, D. D., G. B., Richmond, Va., 195.
Stuart, J. L., Hangchow, China, 140.
Stuart, J. Leighton, Hangchow, China, 192.
Sturgeon, J. C, Troy, Ala., 125.
Sullivan, C. E., Galveston, Texas, 178.
Summerell, J. N. H, Norfolk, Va., 199.
Summers, J. E., Derita, N. C, 164.
Summey, D. D., Geo., New Orleans, La., 146.
Swallow, I. F., St. Joseph, Mo., 157.
Swann, J. B., Bullock's Creek, S. C, 167.
Sweets, D. M., Shelbyville, Ky., 140.
Sweets, H. H, Louisville, Ky., 140.
Sydenstricker, D. D., D. S., Academy, 193.
Sydenstricker, F. P., Ronceverte, W. Va.,
193.
Svdenstricker, H. M., Corinth, Miss., 148.
Sydnor, G. G., Rome, Ga., 137.
Tadlock, A. D., Clintonville, Ky., 140.
Tanner, J. G., San Angelo, Texas, 181.
Tappey, Francis, Huntsville, Ala., 127.
Tate, J. C, Clarksville, Tenn., 141.
Tate, L. B., Chien San, Korea, 155.
Taylor, D., New Boston, Texas, 188.
Taylor, Huston R., Stanton, Tenn., 177.
ALPHABETICAL LIST OP MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
227
Taylor, J. H., Macon, Ga., 138.
Taylor, M. C, Calvert, Texas, 180.
Taylor, Thompson, Beach, I. T., 187.
Taylor, W. H., Surnmerville, S. C, 169.
Telford, R. E., Caddo, I. T., 184.
Telford, D. D., R. L., Lewisburg, W. Va.,
193.
Temple, A. H., Locust, N. C, 164.
Tenney, D. D., L., Brownwood, Texas, 181.
Tenney, S. F., Crockett, Texas, 184.
Tenney, S. M., Houston, Texas, 179.
Tenney, W. C, Bartlett, Texas, 182.
Thacker, J. E., Norfolk, Va., 199.
Thorn, Wm. F., Elrod, N. C, 161.
Thomas, A., 124.
Thomas, F. D., College Park, Ga., 135.
Thomas, James, Wilson, N. C, 157.
Thomas, Jos. A., Milboro Springs, Va., 195.
Thomas, J., Sanford, Fla., 133.
Thomas, Trigg, Kansas City, Mo., 157.
Thompson, D. D., E., Charleston, W. Va.,
194.
Thompson, F. W., Hot Springs, Ark., 130.
Thompson, G. E., Ft. White, Fla., 133.
Thompson, J. A., Hazard, Ky., 144.
Thompson, T. J., Buena Vista, Va., 196.
Thomas, T. T., 157.
Thomson, D. D., C. T., Lexington, Ky., 143.
Thorburn, Wm., Magnolia, Miss., 151.
Thorne, Wm., McKenzie, Tenn., 179.
Thornwell, D. D., J. H., Fort Mills, S. C,
167.
Tidball, C. M., Baldwin, Ark., 131.
Tidball, W. J., Taylorsville, N. C, 159.
Tims, W. F., McCool, Miss., 148.
Tims, J. C, Moultrie, Ga., 138.
Todd, A. H.. Florence, Ala., 131.
Tollett, G. W., Dechard, Tenn., 178.
Travis, J. E.. Shelbina, Mo., 155.
Trawick, C. W., Hickory, N. C, 160.
Trenholm, T. B.. Edisto Island, S. C, 169.
Trevino, Elias, Corpus Christi, Texas., 189.
Trimble, T. T., La Belle, Mo., 155.
Trimble, W. S., Monterey, Va., 196.
Triplett, J. E., Shenandoah, W. Va., 201.
Trostle, J. A.. Lexington, Va., 196.
Trump, W. F., Tuscumbia, Ala.. 127.
Tuts, E., Banner Elk. N. C, 160.
Tull. H. V.. Riesel, Texas, 181.
Turnbull, D. D., L. B., Lexington, Va., 195.
Turner, J. A., Palmer, Miss., 149.
Turner, J. F., Scranton, Miss., 151.
Tyler, J. W., Louisville, Ky., 141.
Underwood, W. C, Denmark, Tenn., 179.
Van Devanter. J. N., Fort Defiance. Va., 195.
Van Lear, John. Tuscaloosa, Ala., 128.
Vardell, C. G., Red Springs, N. C, 161.
Varner. J. G., Mount Pleasant, Texas, 188.
Vass, L. C, Leopoldville, Africa.. 157.
Vaughan, D. D., C. R.. Roanoke, Va., 195.
Vedder, D. D.. C. S.. Charleston. S. C, 169.
Venable, A. S., Bayview, Va., 199.
Verner, S. P.. Columbia. S. C, 128.
Vinson. R. E., Austin. Texas, 190.
Voss. Lewis, New Orleans. La., 145.
Waddell, D. D., I. W., Archer, Fla.. 133.
Waddell, D. D.. J. A.. Lexington, Va., 192.
Wade, J. T., Santee, Ga., 134.
Wadlev. W. T.. Ripley, Miss., 149.
Wakefield. John, Concord. N. C, 159.
Walden, D. D., J. W.. Athens, Ga., 134.
Walker, L. R., Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Walker, R. P.. Hugo. I. T.. 1S4.
Walker, W. T., Rowland, N. C. 162.
Wallace, D. D., A. A., Mexico, Mo., 154.
Wallace, B. E., Warren. Ark., 131.
Wallace H. W.. New Orleans, La.. 146.
Wallace, I. E , Fppth Snrings, S. C, 168.
Wallace, D. D., J. A., Bristol. Tenn.. 175.
Wallace, J. D.. Covington, Tpnn.. 177.
Waller, J. B.. Norfolk. Va.. 199.
Waller, C. D., Georgetown, Ky., 144.
WfiVer, W. T.. Charlotte, N. C, 164.
Walsh, W. M., Stanley, N. C, 164.
Walthall, D. K., Richmond, Va., 192.
Walton, A. P., Elkton, Va., 196.
Walton, H. L., Sharp's Wharf, Va., 199.
Walton, R. A., Owensville, Ky., 143.
Walton, T. P., Talladega, Ala., 127.
Ward, J. E., Hartsville, S. C, 172.
Wardlaw, A. G., Union, S. C, 170.
Wardlaw, F. H., Greenwood, S. C, 173.
Washburn, E. D., Romney, W. Va.
Washburn, Geo. L., Washington, Mo., 157.
Washington, L. J., St. Louis, Mo., 124.
Watkins, A. D., Cass, W. Va., 193.
Watkins, D. D., J. S., Spartanburg, S. C,
170.
Watkins, T. H., Tuscumbia, Mo., 154.
Watson, L. R., Berkley, Va., 199.
Watson, Samuel M., Howel, Mo., 156.
Way, E. W., Dalton, Ga., 137.
Weaver, C. C, Woodlawn, Ala., 127.
Webb, D. D., F. B., Talladega, Ala., 126.
Webb, D. D., R. A., Clarksville, Tenn., 178.
Webster, J. S., Hancock, Md., 197.
Welford, E. T., Newport News, Va., 199.
Wells, J. M., Wilmington, N. C, 167.
Wells, L. E., Teachey's, N. C, 167.
West, J. D., Bryan, Texas, 179.
West, J. R., Bryan, Texas, 180.
West, J. T., Highland Park, Ala., 125.
West, W. C, Ocean Springs, Miss., 151.
Whaling, D. D., Thornton, Lexington, Va.,
195.
Wharey, D. D., J. M., Mooresville, N. C,
159.
Wharton, C. N., Morganfield, Ky., 142.
Wharton, R. L., Cardenas, Cuba, 165.
Wharton, D. D., T. A., Columbia, Tenn., 174.
White, A. W. Piedmont, S. C, 174.
White, Edgar, Frierson, La., 147.
White, D. D., G. W., Mooresfield, Va., 201.
White, D. D., H. A., Columbia, S. C, 169.
White, H. C, Ringgold, Ga., 143.
White, D. D., H. M., Kernstown, Va., 201.
White, H. W., Hsu Chow Fu, China, 202.
White, R. A., Gerardstown, W. Va., 202.
White, Wm. C, Warm Springs, Va., 195.
White, W. H., Lockhart, S. C. 170.
White, W. McC, Petersburg, Va., 192.
White, W. W., Staunton, Va., 192.
Wilkie, W. B. Y., Dunedin, Fla.. 133.
Wilkinson, D. F., Baker, La., 145.
Wilcock. Frank, Orangeburg, S. C, 169.
Williams, C. C, Hope, Ark., 130.
Williams, H. F., Nashville, Tenn., 178.
Williams, H. J., Charlestown, W. Va., 194.
Williams, J. A., Ada. L T., 184.
Williams, D. D., J. C, Junction, Ark., 130.
Williams, J. M., Covington. La., 146.
Williams, R. M., Wallace, N. C, 166.
Williamson, J. L., Newberry, S. C, 173.
Williamson, S. H.. Statesville, N. C, 160.
Willis, D. D.. R. B.. Searcy, Ark., 129.
Wilson, D. D., A. W., Dodd City. Texas, 188.
Wilson, D. D., B. F., Harrisonburg, Va., 196.
Wilson, E. L., Louisville, Ky., 141.
Wilson, E. L., Waterford, Va., 191.
Wilson, D. D., G. A., Raphine, Va., 195.
Wilson, J. A., Dillon, S. C, 172.
Wilson, J. D., San Antonio, Texas, 189.
Wilson, J. H., Bascomville, S. C, 167.
W T ilson. D. D., J. L., Abbeville, S. C, 173.
Wilson. I,. H., Dickey, Ga., 138.
Wilson, S. L., Ninety-Six, S. C, 174.
Wilson. T. S., News Ferry, Va., 199.
Wilson, W. S., Marion. N. C. 160.
Wilson, D. D.. Wm. V., Lynchburg. Va.. 197.
Winecoff, J. E. L.. Wbiteville, N. C, 166.
Winn, P. P., Decatur, Ga., 135.
Winn. D. D., S. K., Petprsburg, Va., 192.
Winston, c. O., Nashvillp, Tenn., 150.
Withrow, T. S.. Laurel Springs, Va., 200.
Witberspoon, E. B., Boston. Ga., 138.
Witherspoon, D. D., Jere, Richmond, Va., 192
228 ALPHABETICAL LIST OF MINISTERS AND LICENTIATES.
Wolfe, W. W., Pratt City, Ala., 127.
Womeldorf, C. R., Lexington, Va., 195.
Wood, J. S., Wynne, Ark., 129.
Woodbridge, G. G., Minden, La., 146.
Woodbridge, S. J., Chinkiang, China, 169.
Woodbridge, D. D., W. G., Atlanta, Ga.. 135.
Woodrow, D. D., James, Columbia, S. C,
173.
Woods, D. J., Blacksburg, Va., 197.
Woods, Edgar, Charlottesville, Va., 200.
Woods, F. M., Martinsburg, W. Va., 201.
Woods, D. D., H. M., Tsing Kiang Pu,
China, 200.
Woods, J. A., Bolivar, Tenn., 177.
Woods, D. D., N. M., Louisville, Ky., 141.
Woods, S. G., Conway, Mo., 155.
Woods, T. E. P., Bolivar, Tenn., 177.
Woods, W. H., Baltimore, Md., 196.
Wool, J. E., Oxford, N. C, 157.
Word, J. P., Henderson, Texas, 185.
Workman, W. H, Callaway, Va., 198.
Worsham, J. V., Seventy-Six, Mo., 156.
Wycough, W. H, Thurber, Texas, 186.
Wylie, J. E., Bentonville, Ark., 131.
Wyly, W. J., Georgetown, S. C, 172.
Wynne, W. A., Sulphur Springs, Texas.
Gandle, J. L., Holly Springs, 152.
Yarbro, D. N., Smyrna, Tenn., 178.
Yerger, D. D., H. S., Barnesville, Ga., 133.
Yohanon, I. E., Urumia, Persia, 192.
Young, E. J., Lake Como, Fla., 146.
Young, H. A., Goshen Bridge, Va., 195.
Young, D. D., Samuel, Atlanta, Ga., 135.
Young, W. C, Ingleside, Ga., 135.
Yu Tse Siang, Hanchow, China, 141.
Zeigler, W. A., Rocky Mount, La., 146.
Ziegler, W. H, Albany, Ga., 138.
Zernow, H. B., Corydon, Ky., 142.
ORDAINED MISSIONARIES
UNDER CARE OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF FOREIGN MISSIONS, BUT NOT
MEMBERS OF ANY PRESBYTERY OF THE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES.
J. O. Shelby, Linares, Mexico, Presbytery
of Tamanlipas, Synod of Mexico.
J. E. Phipps, Luebo, Congo Free State, Pres-
bytery of Lackawanna, Presbyterian
Church in United States of America.
H. S. Allyn, Lavras, Estado de Minas Geraes,
Brazil.
G. W. Butler, Conhotino, Estado da Pernam-
buco, Brazil.
S. R. Gammon, D. D., Lavras, Estado de
Minas, Geraes, Brazil.
Alva Hardie, Campinas, Estado de Sao Paulo,
Brazil.
G. E. Henderlite, Garanhuns, Estado de Per-
nambuco, Brazil.
W. C. Porter, Natal, Rio Grande do Norte,
Brazil.
F. A. Rodriguez, Campinas, Estado de Sao
Paulo, Brazil.
R. G. See, Casa Branca, Brazil.
J. R. Smith, D. D., Sao Paulo, Estado de
Sao Paulo, Brazil.
W. M. Thompson, Para, Brazil.
The ten last named are members of the Synod of Brazil.
INDEX TO SYNODS AND PRESBYTERIES.
229
INDEX TO SYNODS AND PRESBYTERIES.
L— SYNODS.
Alabama 124
Arkansas 129
Florida 132
Georgia 134
Kentucky 139
Louisiana 145
Mississippi 147
Missouri 153
North Carolina 157
South Carolina 167
Tennessee 174
Texas 179
"Virginia 190
II.— PRESBYTERIES.
Abingdon 190
Albemarle 157
Arkansas 129
Asheville 158
Athens 134
Atlanta 135
Augusta 136
Bethel 167
Brazos 179
Brownwood ISO
Central Alabama 124
Central Mississippi 147
Central Texas 181
Charleston 169
Cherokee 137
Chickasaw 148
Chesapeake 191
Columbia 174
Concord 159
Dallas 182
Durant 184
East Alabama 124
East Hanover 192
Eastern Texas 184
Ebenezer 139
Enoree 169
Ethel 149
Fayetteville 161
Florida 132
Fort Worth 1S6
Greenbrier 193
Harmony 171
Holston 175
Indian 187
Kanawha 194
King's Mountain 163
Knoxville 176
Lafayette 153
Lexington 195
Louisiana 145
Louisville 140
Macon 138
Maryland 196
Mecklenburg 163
Memphis 177
Meridian 150
Mississippi 151
Missouri 151
Mobile 125
Montgomery 197
Muhlenburg 141
Nashville 177
New Orleans 145
Norfolk 198
North Alabama 126
North Mississippi 152
Orange 165
Ouachita 130
Paducah 142
Palmyra 155
Paris 187
Pee Dee 172
Pine Bluff 131
Potosi 156
Red River 146
Roanoke 199
Savannah 139
South Carolina 173
St. John's 133
St. Louis 156
Suwanee 133
Tombeckbee 153
Transylvania 142
Tuscaloosa 128
Upper Missouri 157
Washbourne 131
Western District 179
Western Texas 189
West Hanover 200
West Lexington 143
Wilmington 166
Winchester 201
INDEX.
Ad Interim Committee on Catechism
on the Church, report of, 120.
Committee discharged, 16.
to consolidate Executive Commit-
tees, report of, 111.
on Revision of Proof Texts to Stand-
ards, report of, 13, 17, 99.
action on, 41.
new committee appointed, 41.
of Conference on Closer Relations,
13, 33, 45, 106.
committees enlarged, 45, 57.
to attend Conference on Divorce, 23.
on Vacant Churches and Ministers
Without Charges, 26.
on Extending Plan of Church and
Christian Education, 30.
Amendment to Form of Government
enacted, 44.
as to dissolving pastorates, sent
down, 18, 43.
as to commissions, sent down, 48.
Afro-American Presbyterian Church,
statistics of to be put in the min-
utes, 50.
statistics of, 210.
Alliance of Reformed Churches, report
of delegates to, 39.
report from Western Section, 39,
118.
Alphabetical roll of ministers, 218.
American Bible Society, celebration of
90th anniversary, 22.
Anniversary of first presbytery, 15, 39,
40.
of American Bible Society, 22.
Assessments, presbyterial, 212.
Associate Reformed Synod of the
South, organic union with. 39, 40.
Auditing Committee, report of, 43.
local for next year, 43.
expert, to audit accounts for Execu-
tive Committee of Foreign Mis-
sions, 36.
Austin Seminary, report of, 117.
Ball, Mrs. Sarah C, tributes to, 24, 61,
117.
Bequest, forms for, 122.
Bible Cause, report of Permanent Com-
mittee on, 90.
of Standing Committee on, 21.
collection for, urged and time of, 22.
Bureau of Information for Vacant
Churches and Ministers Without
Charge, 27.
Catechism on the Church, report of
committee to prepare, 120.
committee discharged, 16.
Charter, committee to examine, 57.
Church and Christian Education, re-
port of Permanent Committee on,
94.
of Standing Committee on, 30.
Secretary for, 30.
Clerks of the Assembly, 3, 8.
Closer Relations with Other Presbyte-
rian Bodies, report of Ad Interim
Committee, 13, 106.
report of Special Committee, 17, 33,
45.
resolution referred to enlarged com-
mittee, 57.
Collections ordered by the Assembly,
213.
days for, declines to change, 17.
Colored Evangelization, report of Ex-
ecutive Committee on, 80.
of the Standing Committee on, 49.
Columbia Seminary, report of, 112.
and the Atlanta University, 31.
Commissions to hear judicial com-
plaints, 20.
report of, in the Wells complaint, 28
report of, in the Thurmond com-
plaint, 46.
amendments as to, sent down, 18,
48.
installation by, 49.
Commissioners to Assembly, mode of
entertaining, 16.
Committees, roll of standing, 10.
Complaint of J. M. Wells and others.
18.
commission to hear, 20.
action on, 28.
of N. D. Thurmond, 18.
commission to hear, 20.
action on, 46.
of W. B. Mcllwaine and J. W. Moore
vs. Ex. Com. of Foreign Missions,
35.
Conference, Inter-Church, on marriage
and divorce, delegates to, 23.
INDEX.
231
on closer relations, delegates to, 13,
106.
Special Committee on, 17.
report of, 33.
resolution referred to Special Com-
mittee on, 57.
Congressional Library, copy of min-
utes for, 54.
Co-operation Among Presbyterian
Churches, committee on, contin-
ued, 45.
Cumberland Assembly, greetings to,
16; from, 20.
Day of Prayer, special, for schools and
colleges, 56.
Days, special, appointed by Assembly,
214.
Dismissals, declines column in statisti-
cal tables for, 54.
Divorce and Marriage, action on, 22.
Conference on, delegates to, 23.
Eakle, H. P., testimonial to, 38.
Education for Ministry, Ex. Com. of
consolidated with Min. Relief, 111,
55.
Evangelistic Committee, declines to
appoint, 25.
Executive Committee of Ministerial
Education and Relief, declines to
divide, 16.
incorporated, 25.
of Home Missions to be incorpo-
rated, 112.
Executive Committees, when to issue
appeals, 40, 68.
roll of, 3.
mode of electing and term of service,
18, 19.
Secretaries of, elected for three
years, 49.
of Education and of Min. Relief con-
solidated, 55, 111.
Federation, proposed scheme for Pres-
byterian bodies not eliminated
from Committee on Closer Rela-
tions, 45.
National, of Churches and Christian
Workers, letter from, 39, 40.
Foreign Correspondence, report of
Standing Committee on, 39.
Foreign missionaries not on our roll,
228.
Foreign Missions, report of Executive
Committee on, 75.
of Standing Committee on, 35.
Co-ordinate Secretary of, elected, 35.
complaint of Mcllwaine and Moore
against, 35.
Forward Movement, 36.
Form of Government amended, 44.
amendments to, sent down, 18, 43,
48.
General Assembly, mode of entertain-
ing commissioners to, 16.
Greetings to Cumberland Assembly,
16; from, 20.
to Northern Assembly, 15; from, 21.
General Index to Presbyteries and
Synods, 229.
Home and School, report of Trustees
of, 87.
of Standing Committee on, 32.
Home Missions, report of Executive
Committee of, 60.
of Standing Committee on, 23.
Executive Committee of, to be incor-
porated, 25.
to organize a Bureau of Information,
27.
India, General Assembly of, corre-
spondence with, 39.
Installations, how to be made, 49.
Japan, co-operation as to theological
education in, 35.
Jews, evangelization of, 27.
Johnson, Rev. Angus, honored, 12.
Judicial Committee, report of, 18.
Kentucky Seminary, report of, 115.
Knox, John, celebration of anniversary
of, 8, 18.
Leave of Absence, report of Standing
Committee on, 57.
resolution from committee on, 38.
Legacy of N. T. Leonard, 44.
Leonard, N. T., legacy of, 44.
Macrae, G. W., faithfulness of, 35.
Mcllwaine and Moore, complaint of, 35.
Ministerial Education and Relief, com-
mittees on, consolidated, 111.
declines to separate, 16.
report of Executive Committee on,
84.
of Standing Committee on, 55.
Relief, declines to change day of col-
lection for, 17.
Ministers Without Charges and Vacant
Churches, report of committee on,
26.
Minutes of Assembly, price of, 57, 122.
Copy to be sent to Congressional
Library, 54.
Moderators, succession of, 215.
Narrative of State of Religion, 49, 89.
Northern Assembly, greeting to, 15;
from, 21.
Next Place of Meeting, 17.
Obituary, ministerial, 214.
Officers and Agencies of Assembly, 3.
Organic Union with A. R. P. Synod of
the South, 39, 40.
Orphans' Homes, statistical column
for refused, 54.
Overtures presented, 12.
Page remembered by Assembly, 38.
232
INDEX.
Pastoral Relation, amendment sent
down as to mode of dissolving, 18,
43.
Prayer for Assembly, 122.
Presbyteries, co-operative in Cbina, 35.
Presbytery, bi-centenary of first, in
U. S., 15, 39, 40.
called meetings of, 44.
Proof-texts of Standards, report of
Ad Interim Committee on, 13, 17,
99.
report of Special Committee on, 41.
new Ad Interim Committee on, 41.
Protest of H. W. Wbite and others as
to church union in China, 36.
Publication, report of Executive Com-
mittee on, 64.
of Standing Committee on, 51.
declines to set up branch depository,
55.
declines to change day of collection
for, 17.
official monthly for all causes, 55.
a Young People's weekly, 55.
Reavis, J. O., chosen Co-ordinate Sec-
retary of Foreign Missions, 35.
Records of Synods, action on, 16, 17,
29, 33, 42, 45, 50, 58.
Reed, Dr. R. C, discourse of, on John
Knox, 8, 18.
Reformation of 16th century, thanks-
giving for, 39.
Reformed Church in America, dele-
gate from General Synod of, 13,
40; to, 40.
Roll of Assembly, 5.
Sabbath and Family Religion, report
of Permanent Committee on, 97.
of Standing Committee on, 30.
Sabbath Schools, report of General Su-
perintendent of, 69.
of Standing Committee on, 52.
statistics of, 208.
Secretaries, mode of electing and term
of service, 18, 19.
chosen this year for three years, 49.
Southwestern Presbyterian University,
Divinity School of. 114.
Standing Committees, 10.
Stated Clerk and Treasurer, salary of,
44.
Stated Clerks, notices to, 216.
Statistical Reports from Presbyteries,
123.
Summary by Presbyteries, 203.
by Synods, 206.
Statistics of Afro-American Church to
be printed, 50.
Statistics of that Church, 210.
of Foreign Missions, 207.
of Sabbath Schools and Young Peo-
ple's Societies, 208.
of Woman's Societies, 209.
General summary, comparative, 211.
Sweets, H. H., elected Secretary of
Min. Education and Relief, 112.
Synodical Meetings, times and places,
213.
records, action on, 16, 17, 29, 33, 42,
45, 50, 58.
Systematic Beneficence, report of
Standing Committee on, 34.
Thanksgiving Day, for Reformation,
39.
Theological Seminary, report of Stand-
ing Committee on, 36.
Co-operation in Japan and China, 35.
Thurmond, N. D., complaint of, 18, 20,
46.
Treasurer of Assembly, report of, 59.
Trustees of Assembly, names of, 4.
report of, 102.
Twentieth Century Fund, report of
committee on, 42.
Union Theological Seminary, report of,
114.
University, Presbyterian, in Atlanta,
14, 37.
Vacant Churches, report on, adopted,
26.
Vote of Thanks, 57.
Wells, J. M. and others, complaint of,
18, 20, 28.
White, H. W. and others, protest of, as
to church union in China, 36.
Woman's Societies, report of Standing
Committee on, 31.
statistics of, 209.
Young People's Societies, report of
Standing Committee on, 52.
of General Superintendent of, 69.
alliance of refused, 33.
statistics of, 208.
weekly paper for, 55.
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